Exploring Complexity in Science and Technology from a Santa Fe Institute Perspective - Faculty
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Melanie Mitchell, Professor, Computer Science, Portland State University; External Professor and Science Board member, Santa Fe Institute. Melanie Mitchell received a Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Michigan in 1990. Since then she has held faculty or professional positions at the University of Michigan, the Santa Fe Institute, Los Alamos National Laboratory, the OGI School of Science and Engineering, and Portland State University.
Melanie has served as Director of the Santa Fe Institute’s Complex Systems Summer School; at Portland State University she teaches, among other courses, Exploring Complexity in Science and Technology.
Her major work is in the areas of analogical reasoning, complex systems, genetic algorithms and cellular automata, and her publications in those fields are frequently cited. She is the author of An Introduction to Genetic Algorithms, a widely known introductory book published by MIT Press in 1996. Her most recent book is Complexity: A Guided Tour named by Amazon.com as one of the 10 best science books of 2009.
David Feldman, Professor, Physics and Astronomy, College of the Atlantic; Co-Director, SFI Complex Systems Summer School, Beijing
Dave's research training is in theoretical physics and mathematics, and his research interests lie in the fields of statistical mechanics and nonlinear dynamics. In particular, his research has examined how one might measure "complexity" or pattern in a mathematical system, and how such complexity is related to disorder. This work can be loosely categorized as belonging to the constellation of research topics often referred to as "chaos and complex systems." In his research, Dave uses both analytic and computational techniques. Dave has authored research papers in journals including Physical Review E, Chaos, Physics Letters A, and Advances in Complex Systems.
As a graduate student at UC-Davis, Dave received several awards in recognition of both teaching and scholarship: The Dissertation Year Fellowship; The Chancellor's Teaching Fellowship; and he was nominated for the Outstanding Graduate Student Teaching Award. Dave joined the faculty at College of the Atlantic in 1998, where he teaches a wide range of physics and math courses. He also teaches classes that explore connections between science and politics, such as Making the Bomb (about the Manhattan project and atomic weapons), and Gender and Science.
Van Savage, Assistant Professor, Biomathematics, University of California at Los Angeles, former SFI Postdoctoral Fellow
Van is a mathematical biologist with strong interests in ecology, evolution, sleep, and cancer. Savage conducted his graduate training in applied mathematics and theoretical physics under Carl Bender at Washington University in St. Louis. Subsequently, he switched his research focus to problems in physiology and ecology and took a postdoctoral fellowship with Geoffrey West and James Brown at the Santa Fe Institute and Los Alamos National Laboratory. His work continued through two appointments at Harvard University as an autonomous postdoctoral fellow at the Bauer Center and as a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard Medical School. His work is among the first to explicitly and mechanistically connect biological scaling theory, based on individual organisms, to ecological and evolutionary dynamics as well as to biomedical problems. This research program has been very productive, culminating in 35 papers thus far that have appeared in Science, Nature, PNAS, The American Naturalist, Ecology Letters, and Physical Review D.