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Displaying 10 of 42 results Arizona State University clear search

C Michael Barton Member since: Thu, May 10, 2007 at 05:12 AM Full Member Reviewer

PhD University of Arizona (Anthropology/Geosciences), MA University of Arizona (Anthropology/Geosciences), BA University of Kansas (Anthropology)

Professor, School of Human Evolution & Social Change
Professor, School of Complex Adaptive Systems
Affiliate Professor, School of Earth and Space Exploration
Arizona State University

My interests center around long-term human ecology and landscape dynamics with ongoing projects in the Mediterranean (late Pleistocene through mid-Holocene) and recent work in the American Southwest (Holocene-Archaic). I’ve done fieldwork in Spain, Bosnia, and various locales in North America and have expertise in hunter/gatherer and early farming societies, geoarchaeology, lithic technology, and evolutionary theory, with an emphasis on human/environmental interaction, landscape dynamics, and techno-economic change.

Quantitative methods are critical to archaeological research, and socioecological sciences in general. They are an important focus of my research, especially emphasizing dynamic modeling, spatial technologies (including GIS and remote sensing), statistical analysis, and visualization. I am a member of the open source GRASS GIS international development team that is making cutting edge spatial technologies available to researchers and students around the world.

smenesesr Member since: Tue, Feb 13, 2024 at 06:20 AM

James Allison Member since: Tue, Mar 05, 2024 at 09:38 PM Full Member

Ph.D., Anthropology, Arizona State University

Travis Kupp Member since: Sat, Mar 16, 2024 at 11:59 PM

Yunhwan Kim Member since: Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 12:18 PM Full Member

M.A. in Communications at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies(South Korea), B.A. in Political Science(Communications major) at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies(South Korea)

Sean Bergin Member since: Thu, May 10, 2007 at 05:26 AM Full Member Reviewer

Colin Lynch Member since: Fri, Feb 14, 2025 at 06:35 PM Full Member

Bachelor of Science, Neuroscience, University of Arizona, Ph.D., Animal Behavior, Arizona State University

Science is most interesting when it subverts expectations. As a medic in the army, I used to think of the world in terms of strict hierarchies; some central governing agency gives orders, which trickle down the chain of command. However, it turns out that most biological systems do not work this way, instead distributing control among the members of the group (be they genes, cells, animals). I have since dedicated my research career to understanding how this works. Currently, I am a postdoctoral fellow at Arizona State University in the School of Complex Adaptive Systems, which is the same university where I received my PhD.

I am broadly interested in using both experimental and theoretical tools to uncover the cognitive mechanisms that underlie self-organization in complex adaptive systems. I am also interested in the optimal design of experiments for the biological sciences.

John Anderies Member since: Fri, Oct 21, 2011 at 08:44 PM Full Member

darkingwing Member since: Mon, May 21, 2012 at 07:42 PM

Claudine Gravel-Miguel Member since: Thu, Nov 01, 2012 at 04:25 PM Full Member Reviewer

M.A., Anthropology, University of Victoria, Ph.D., Anthropology, Arizona State University

Dr. Gravel-Miguel currently works as a Postdoctoral Research Scholar for the Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University. She does research in Archaeology and focuses on the Upper Paleolithic of Southwest Europe. She currently works on projects ranging from cultural transmission to human-environment interactions in prehistory.

Archaeology, GIS, ABM, social networks, portable art, ornaments, data science

Displaying 10 of 42 results Arizona State University clear search

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