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Displaying 10 of 277 results for "Ibo van de Poel" clear search

Andrew Collins Member since: Fri, Apr 18, 2014 at 02:19 PM

MA, PhD, MSC, BA

Andrew J. Collins, Ph.D., is an assistant professor at Old Dominion University in the Department of Engineering Management and Systems Engineering. He has a Ph.D. in Operations Research from the University of Southampton, and his undergraduate degree in Mathematics was from the University of Oxford. He has published over 80 peer-review articles. He has been the Principal Investigator on projects funded to the amount of approximately $7 million. Dr. Collins has developed several research simulations including an award-winning investigation into the foreclosure contagion that incorporated social networks.

Grant Snitker Member since: Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 09:39 PM Full Member

Ph.D., Anthropology, Arizona State University

I am an environmental archaeologist, specializing in charcoal analysis, computational and analytical proxy modeling, and quantitative methods to understand the dynamic relationship between fire, humans, and long-term environmental change. I work primarily in the Western United States and the Western Mediterranean. I am passionate about our public lands and ensuring that everyone has access and opportunity to experience them.

Envrionmental Archaeology, Fire Ecology, GIS, Agent-based modeling, Geoarchaeology

Juan Castilla-Rho Member since: Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 09:47 PM Full Member

PhD candidate, Hydrogeology, MEngSc Water Resources (UNSW), BSc(Hons) Water Engineering (Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile)

María Pereda Member since: Thu, Jun 12, 2014 at 08:58 AM Full Member

Ph.D

Aaron Bramson Member since: Tue, Jul 01, 2014 at 12:36 PM Full Member

Ph.D. Philosophy and Political Science, University of Michigan, M.S. Mathematics, Northeastern University, B.S. Economics, University of Florida, B.A. Philosophy, University of Florida

Dr. Aaron Bramson is principal investigator of the AI Strategy Center of GA technologies in Tokyo, Japan, as well as an Affiliate Researcher in the Department of General Economics of Ghent University in Belgium. His research specialty is complexity science, especially methodologies for modeling complex systems. Research topics span across disciplines: measures of polarization and diversity, belief measure interoperability, integrating geospatial and network analyses for measuring walkability and neighborhood identification, and myriad applications in artificial intelligence and data visualization. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Michigan in a joint program with the departments of Political Science and Philosophy as well as an M.S. in Mathematics from Northeastern University.

Complex systems, agent-based modeling, social simulation, computational models, network models, network theory, methodology, philosophy of science, ontology, epistemology, ethics, artificial intelligence, big data analysis, geospatial data analysis,

Nina Schwarz Member since: Fri, Jul 25, 2014 at 01:29 PM Full Member

Dr.

Felipe Rivera Member since: Mon, Aug 11, 2014 at 02:19 PM

Bachelor on Engineering Sciences, Civil Engineer, diploma in Construction Engineering and Management (professional degree)

Smarzhevskiy Ivan Member since: Sun, Aug 17, 2014 at 12:23 PM Full Member

Independent reseacher

Smarzhevskiy Ivan, born 1961, graduated from the Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics of Moscow State University in 1983. Ph.D. in Economic Sciences since 2000.

Research interests: individual and collective behavior in the organization, decision making, sociology of small groups.

decision making, sociology of small groups, agent based models

Volker Grimm Member since: Wed, Jul 18, 2007 at 11:13 AM Full Member

Volker Grimm currently works at the Department of Ecological Modelling, Helmholtz-Zentrum für Umweltforschung. Volker does research in ecology and biodiversity research.

How to model it: Ecological models, in particular simulation models, often seem to be formulated ad hoc and only poorly analysed. I am therefore interested in strategies and methods for making ecological modelling more coherent and efficient. The ultimate aim is to develop preditive models that provide mechanstic understanding of ecological systems and that are transparent and structurally realistic enough to support environmental decision making.

Pattern-oriented modelling: This is a general strategy of using multiple patterns observed in real systems as multiple criteria for chosing model structure, selecting among alternative submodels, and inversely determining entire sets of unknown model parameters.

Individual-based and agent-based modelling: For many, if not most, ecological questions individual-level aspects can be decisive for explaining system-level behavior. IBM/ABMs allow to represent individual heterogeneity, local interactions, and/or adaptive behaviour

Ecological theory and concepts: I am particularly interested in exploring stability properties like resilience and persistence.

Modelling for ecological applications: Pattern-oriented modelling allows to develop structurally realistic models, which can be used to support decision making and the management of biodiversity and natural resources. Currently, I am involved in the EU project CREAM, where a suite of population models is developed for pesticide risk assessment.

Standards for model communication and formulation: In 2006, we published a general protocol for describing individual- and agent-based models, called the ODD protocol (Overview, Design concepts, details). ODD turned out to be more useful (and needed) than we expected.

Chloe Atwater Member since: Mon, Aug 25, 2014 at 02:59 AM

B.S. in Evolutionary Anthropology, UC Davis, PhD Student in Archaeology, ASU

Applying agent-based models to archaeological data, using modern ethnoarchaeological data as an analog for behavior.

Displaying 10 of 277 results for "Ibo van de Poel" clear search

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