Simon Angus: Difference between revisions
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** [[Media:157_Moo_pee.pdf|Moody - recursive neighbourhood mean]] | ** [[Media:157_Moo_pee.pdf|Moody - recursive neighbourhood mean]] | ||
* [[Media:hubler-pnas.pdf|Hubler-pnas-ball-bearings.pdf]] | * [[Media:hubler-pnas.pdf|Hubler-pnas-ball-bearings.pdf]] | ||
* [[Media:lorenz-nonperiodic.pdf]] .. This is page 8 from the famous Lorenz paper. My preference would be to include the graphs, and the top of the page which has 'Lorenz' in the by-line. | |||
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= Photos from CSSS07 = | = Photos from CSSS07 = |
Revision as of 15:55, 13 June 2007
Wheeler Peak Planning
Summary
Car-trip: 117 miles, (suggested 3hrs): St John's to Taos Ski Valley
Walk distance: 7.4 (private route notes, see below) - 8 miles (National Parks)
DIfficulty: Intermediate -- Expert
Climb: Just under 4000ft
Links
- Google Maps directions and route
- Peak at topozone .. printable topographic maps
- National Forrest trail advice
- Trip report -- informative, with photos
Resources for CSSS Participants
- Mapping science: http://scimaps.org/
- Asthma (lung function) modelling from the NECSI conference last year: http://necsi.org/events/iccs6/viewabstract.php?id=377
- (for Amelie): Clustering techniques:
- Hubler-pnas-ball-bearings.pdf
- Media:lorenz-nonperiodic.pdf .. This is page 8 from the famous Lorenz paper. My preference would be to include the graphs, and the top of the page which has 'Lorenz' in the by-line.
Photos from CSSS07
Lake Nambe Hiking Trip
- Email me if you would like to see some more photos from this trip (I will email you the .zip file).
About me
G'day all,
Just saying hello here -- other work-related stuff is below. Tried to find a photo bushwalking in the Australian mountains, but I'm usually behind the lense, rather than infront of it, so this is the best I could do -- walking in the Malverns -- hills near to where my sister was studying in Oxford, GB. The other pic is taken of a beautiful stand of Eucalyptus trees (mainly Eucalyptus pilularis (Blackbutt) or E. saligna (Sydney Blue Gum)) in the Blue Gum Forrest -- a famous walking destination to the West of Sydney, Australia, where I work. Sadly, the forrest is mostly destroyed now due to bushfires that hit in the recent Summer. A shame, but I thought I'd share them with you all the same.
I'm working at the School of Economics, University of NSW, Sydney, Australia. My background is in engineering/chemistry, and have continued to be fascinated by self-organizing systems -- then studying self-organizing polymer membranes, and now, studying self-organizing/endogenous network formation processes in human interaction networks. This means working in game theory, graph theory, and computational modelling of human behaviour -- specifically trying to ask, What is the outcome of a system of interacting individuals who are able to change their interaction environment themselves? Follow the link below for more info on this, including my recent PhD dissertation on the topic.
Other than walking, other things I'm into include going to church (I currently attend Unichurch, UNSW), mountain running (see The B-List) and road and mountain biking.
I was in Santa Fe in 2004 and am looking forward to becoming an 'ossy' again...
See you in Santa Fe!
Email:
Homepage: