Santa Fe Institute

Information & Computation

Topic News

March 27, 2012, 4:23 p.m.

Live on Twitter: Follow the complexity economics rethink live this week

The economics status quo isn't working; it's time for a rethink. SFI and the Krasnow Institute present "The Science of Complexity: Understanding the Global Financial Crisis" May 16-18 in Arlington, Virginia. Follow the discussion live on Twitter at #rethink. ... More

All News

April 19, 2012, 4:58 p.m.

Why bigger cities are greener cities

The Atlantic

As metro areas get larger their metabolic rate essentially speeds up, making them more productive and inventive, and greener, according to an article in The Atlantic that cites SFI's cities research. ... More

All News

April 24, 2012, 4:56 p.m.

Interview: Risk, reward, and advances in investment science

Legg Mason Capital Management

In an interview for Legg Mason Capital Management, SFI Trustee Michael Mauboussin interviews frequent SFI collaborator Ole Peters on the science of risk and reward, the limitations of traditional economic theory, and building optimal portfolios. ... More

All News

March 27, 2012, 2:38 p.m.

High school students: Explore complexity and modeling science this summer at CAMP

This summer, SFI and George Mason University are offering an intensive two-week Complexity and Modeling Program (CAMP) for high school students on the GMU campus in northern Virginia. ... More

All News

April 18, 2012, 2:13 p.m.

Chemistry of life: Following carbon fixation to the earliest branches on the tree of life

PLoS Computational Biology

In a new study, SFI's Rogier Braakman and SFI's Eric Smith trace the development of life-sustaining chemistry on Earth and identify what they believe is the earliest ancestral form of carbon fixation. ... More

All News

April 11, 2012, 4:15 p.m.

SFI's Doyne Farmer to lead complexity economics program at INET@Oxford

SFI Professor J. Doyne Farmer will lead the complexity economics program at INET@Oxford, a collaboration announced today between the James Martin School for the 21st Century at Oxford University and the Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET). ... More

All News

March 27, 2012, 12:18 p.m.

Audio: What happened to the Puebloans?

Colorado Public Radio

On Colorado Public Radio, Tim Kohler describes how archeologists are using computer modeling to learn why the Puebloans left southwest Colorado in the late 1200's. ... More

All News

March 27, 2012, 2:22 p.m.

Which economic theory will inform U.S. financial reform?

OpEd News

An essay in OpEd News asks which economic perspective will inform U.S. financial reform, and traces the history of economic theory, including SFI's founding and the its role in the advent of "complexity economics." ... More

All News

Feb. 27, 2012, 9:23 a.m.

Video: What Computers Teach Us About Being Human

In a February community lecture, Brian Christian shared his experiences as a "confederate" in an annual man vs. computer "Turing Test," offering insights on ways computers are reshaping what it means to be human. Watch his presentation here. ... More

All News

March 10, 2012, 7:53 a.m.

Research examines how group cooperation might have evolved

The American Naturalist

New research by Erol Akçay (Princeton) and SFI Omidyar Fellow Jeremy Van Cleve demonstrates the crucial role flexible behaviors might play in the evolution of high levels of group cooperation. ... More

All News

March 10, 2012, 9:21 a.m.

SFI selects Paul Hooper as a 2012 Omidyar Fellow

SFI has named evolutionary anthropologist Paul Hooper as a new Omidyar Fellow for 2012. ... More

All News

March 10, 2012, 8:07 a.m.

Turning HIV's evolutionary acumen against it

SFI Bulletin

By turning HIV’s chief weapon, its rapid evolution, against itself, SFI External Professor Bette Korber and her team may have created a vaccine that can teach the immune system to recognize many different forms of the virus. ... More

All News

March 10, 2012, 9:15 a.m.

Study: Order splitting, not herding, a dominant intraday market force

A market behavior known as herding is not as important a trend as economists previously assumed, according to a recent paper by SFI Professors Doyne Farmer and Fabrizio Lillo and their colleagues. ... More

All News

Feb. 24, 2012, 1:31 p.m.

Flash finance: Does computerized trading bring a new dynamic to financial markets?

Wired

After the 2010 flash crash, economists wondered whether high-frequency computerized trading might present a whole new market ecology. In Wired, SFI Professor Doyne Farmer weighs in. ... More

All News

Feb. 21, 2012, 10:37 a.m.

Switching to easier prey allowed hunter-gatherers to maintain a stable ecosystem

Science

"Supergeneralist" hunter-gatherers on Sanak Island, Alaska, were likely able to keep the ecosystem stable by switching prey when a particular species became harder to catch, according to a research by SFI Professor Jennifer Dunne and colleagues. ... More

All News

Feb. 21, 2012, 11:59 a.m.

Video: Cities are sources of problems...and their solutions

Cities are a source of many of the world's most pressing problems. But urbanization might also offer their solutions, according to SFI Distinguished Professor Geoffrey West in an online video. ... More

All News

Feb. 21, 2012, 10:47 a.m.

Infographic: How human harvesting is shifting predator-prey relationships in the Adriatic

Scientific American

The complex web of predator-prey relationships in the Adriatic Sea have shifted, suggesting human harvesting is taking a toll, according to research by SFI Professor Jennifer Dunne and colleagues. ... More

All News

Feb. 9, 2012, 12:27 p.m.

Network analysis reveals investor herding that may lead to stock valuation

In a study in the New Journal of Physics, researchers constructed a network from market transaction data that allowed them to identify investor heading behaviors, an approach they believe could lead to insights about how stock price is determined. ... More

All News

Feb. 13, 2012, 12:20 p.m.

Can ecological thinking (and math) help us understand human diversity?

Santa Fe New Mexican

SFI Omidyar Fellow James O'Dwyer argues that mathematics, combined with an ecological way of thinking, can help humankind better understand diversity in both ecological and human settings. ... More

All News

Feb. 12, 2012, 9:03 p.m.

SFI: 'America's smartest lunch'

The Daily Beast

An article in The Daily Beast calls SFI "America's smartest lunch" and describes how the convergence of scientists, humanists, and other scholars fosters the Institute's signature freestyle forms of collaboration. ... More

All News

Feb. 9, 2012, 12:05 p.m.

Video: How the language of mathematics is leading to insights about social complexity

In a video interview, SFI President Jerry Sabloff says the language of mathematics has made it possible for researchers from half a dozen fields to ask new questions about social complexity. ... More

All News

Jan. 26, 2012, 4:20 p.m.

Two longtime SFI scientists join Institute's resident faculty

The Institute has named two longtime SFI-affiliated researchers, Cris Moore and Luis Bettencourt, to its full-time resident faculty. ... More

All News

Feb. 6, 2012, 11:56 a.m.

The roles of time and chance: Read the 2012 SFI Bulletin online now

The tension between contingency and the regularities that underlie historical processes is a key to understanding many complex systems. SFI's 2012 Bulletin, now online, explores the interplay of time and chance. ... More

All News

Jan. 26, 2012, 3:53 p.m.

Technological progress not slow or steady, but superexponential

Technological Forecasting & Social Change

Rather than improving at a (merely) exponential rate as some have theorized, information technology improves superexponentially -- which is to say, its progress accelerates -- according to SFI research. ... More

All News

Jan. 26, 2012, 2:24 p.m.

New NSF grant to support research in 'natural computation'

All living organisms collect information from their environments and use it to adapt. SFI Omidyar Fellow Simon DeDeo likes to think of this as a form of “natural computation.” ... More

All News

Jan. 27, 2012, 4:34 p.m.

SFI at Davos: How big data present social policy opportunities and pitfalls

At a session of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, SFI External Professor Scott Page explored how the proliferation of data about our movements and preferences will have profound impacts on politics, marketing, infrastructure design, and many other spheres. ... More

All News

Jan. 27, 2012, 3:59 p.m.

SFI at Davos: How a complex systems approach can help improve economic, social, & cyber systems

At a session of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, SFI scientists described ways the latest research in complex systems might enhance the resilience and control of economic, social, and cyber systems. ... More

All News

Jan. 27, 2012, 2:38 p.m.

SFI at Davos: Improved cybersecurity inspired by biology

At a session of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, SFI External Professor Stephanie Forrest offered insights about cybersecurity, drawing inspiration from biology. ... More

All News

Jan. 27, 2012, 11:58 a.m.

SFI at Davos: How rapidly advancing technologies might disrupt economic systems

Financial Times

At a session during the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, SFI External Professor W. Brian Arthur offered insights about the impact of technologies that have the ability to disrupt economic systems. ... More

All News

Jan. 26, 2012, 1:29 p.m.

The cooperation conundrum: Scientists weigh in on understanding altruism

Social Evolution Forum

SFI External Professors Herbert Gintis and Jessica Flack weigh in on the challenges of understanding self-regarding versus cooperative behavior. ... More

All News

Jan. 25, 2012, 11:19 a.m.

Model predicts cholera outbreaks 11 months in advance

R&D Magazine

SFI External Professor Mercedes Pascual and colleagues have created a model that can forecast cholera outbreaks nearly a year before they happen in Bangladesh, giving public health officials more time to prepare. ... More

All News

Jan. 4, 2012, 1:19 p.m.

City’s openness is key to its efficiency, long life

InformationWeek

Cities are open systems whose free-flow of people and ideas continually rejuvenates them, whereas corporations are closed systems that peak and die, according to an InformationWeek article that cites SFI's cities research. ... More

All News

Jan. 10, 2012, 3:04 p.m.

Study: Lean and obese people have different gut microbe networks

PNAS

By constructing models of the microbial communities inside the human digestive system, a team led by SFI External Professor Elhanan Borenstein has revealed key differences between the microbial network interactions in the guts of lean and obese people. ... More

All News

Jan. 4, 2012, 1:50 p.m.

Audio: SFI President Jerry Sabloff on SFI, science, and what scientists are learning about complexity

Santa Fe Radio Cafe

In a radio interview, SFI President Jerry Sabloff discusses SFI's signature style of scientific collaboration, and what scientists are learning about the evolution of intelligence, cities, and social complexity. ... More

All News

Jan. 3, 2012, 3:08 p.m.

Comparing apple valleys and orange counties: The young science of cities

Urbanite Baltimore

In Urbanite Baltimore, SFI Professors Geoffrey West and Luis Bettencourt discuss their nascent theory of cities, indicators of urban health and ideas for improving it, and Baltimore’s place in the metropolitan spectrum. ... More

All News

Jan. 3, 2012, 11:30 a.m.

2012 at SFI: Asking big questions that matter

Santa Fe New Mexican

SFI President Jerry Sabloff tells readers of the Santa Fe New Mexican what the Institute does, and why 2012 is a year for asking big questions at SFI. ... More

All News

Oct. 11, 2011, 3:06 p.m.

Digitization creating a 'vast, automatic, invisible' second economy

Santa Fe New Mexican

SFI External Professor W. Brian Arthur argues that a deep, slow, and silent transformation of our economy is taking place today as a second digital economy supplants the physical one we know. ... More

All News

Dec. 13, 2011, 1:22 p.m.

Major new Templeton Foundation grant to support SFI complexity science

SFI News

SFI has been awarded a major new grant from the John Templeton Foundation to pursue fundamental understandings of the hidden regularities in complex biological and social systems. ... More

All News

Dec. 1, 2011, 5:01 p.m.

Video: Can conflicts in animal societies be studied as computations?

SFI News

SFI Omidyar Fellow Simon DeDeo describes his interest in "natural computation" -- in particular whether researchers can describe and analyze conflicts in animal societies as a series of computations. ... More

All News

Nov. 23, 2011, 11:44 a.m.

Big cities might be greener, and better, than we think

Scientific American

It's true that cities are magnets for crime, pollution, and disease. But they also are centers of innovation, economic growth, and efficiency, argue SFI's Luis Bettencourt and Geoffrey West in Scientific American. ... More

All News

Nov. 21, 2011, 1:54 p.m.

Is sustainability a science? Yes, say researchers

PNAS

Is there a science of sustainability? A team led by SFI External Professor Luis Bettencourt has done the math and concluded that sustainability became a legitimate scientific field just over a decade ago, and the field continues to mature. ... More

All News

Nov. 22, 2011, 5:18 p.m.

Nearly 4 billion people now live in cities. Isn't it time we know urban systems?

Nature Geoscience

The majority of the world's people now lives in cities, yet relatively little is known about urban systems, writes SFI External Professor Luis Bettencourt in a recent book review in Nature Geoscience. ... More

All News

Sept. 20, 2011, 10:57 a.m.

Forest fire mathematics suggests less fire suppression

Physical Review E

Runaway summer forest fires this year in the U.S. Southwest were no surprise to SFI External Professor John Rundle. Mathematical analyses suggest that large fires are a natural consequence of over-controlling fires for more than a century. ... More

All News

Nov. 8, 2011, 1:55 p.m.

Continued population growth necessitates continuously faster innovation

Scientific American

The growth of the global population beyond 7 billion means the pace of innovation must also continue to increase, said SFI Distinguished Professor Geoffrey West at the recent Compass Summit conference. ... More

All News

Nov. 8, 2011, 2:12 p.m.

The border battle between forest and savanna

Science

Modeling by SFI Science Board member Simon Levin and collaborators explores how forests and savannas maintain a balance at the boundaries between the two. ... More

All News

Nov. 8, 2011, 12:04 p.m.

Quantum computing: Smallest particles to answer the biggest questions

Popular Science

In a Q&A in Popular Science, SFI External Professor and Science Board member Seth Lloyd talks about the inner workings and future capabilities of quantum computers. ... More

All News

Nov. 10, 2011, 5:01 p.m.

Audio: On 11/11/11, a mathematician celebrates the number eleven

Vermont Public Radio

In a Vermont Public Radio podcast, mathematician and SFI External Professor Dan Rockmore pays homage to the prime number 11. ... More

All News

Nov. 8, 2011, 1:40 p.m.

Modeling suggests crowds are best navigated around the edges

Wired

Crowds of people move in highly predictable ways and are best navigated at the edges, rather than the inside of the pack, according to a Wired article that quotes SFI External Professor Dirk Helbing. ... More

All News

Oct. 27, 2011, 1:42 p.m.

Audio - Shrews to sloths, Santa Fe to San Francisco: Species and cities scale similarly

Conversation Crossroad

On the talk radio blog Conversation Crossroad, SFI Distinguished Professor Geoffrey West discusses SFI's work to develop a unified theory of cities. ... More

All News

Oct. 24, 2011, 11:42 a.m.

Video: Technology advances signaling a second digital economy

Palo Alto Research Center

In a video presentation, SFI External Professor W. Brian Arthur explains how technology advances are signaling the emergence of a second digital economy that will change the complexion of culture and business forever. ... More

All News

Oct. 27, 2011, 1:27 p.m.

Video: Metabolic rate scaling with species size ties to constraints of networks

MIT's Cambridge Nights

In an interview on MIT's Cambridge Nights program, SFI Distinguished Professor Geoffrey West discusses the implications of metabolic rate scaling with species size. ... More

All News

Oct. 27, 2011, 12:43 p.m.

In economics, exceptional events may be the rule

Science News

Catastrophic market collapses and rapidly inflating bubbles might challenge traditional financial risk models, but the models should consider extreme events, says a Science News article that cites four SFI researchers. ... More

All News

Sept. 30, 2011, 12:19 p.m.

Destabilizing effects of class structure could have driven its global spread

PLOS One

Evolutionary biologists at Stanford, including SFI Science Board co-chair Marcus Feldman, examined why most cultures have a class structure instead of being egalitarian, concluding that the very inequities of the class system may have been the driver for its global spread. ... More

All News

Oct. 24, 2011, 11:28 a.m.

What kind of computer is the brain?

Santa Fe New Mexican

SFI's Chris Wood asks what the evolved brain has that modern computers don't, and suggests that having a more comprehensive understanding of the brain would allow us to apply new computational approaches to problem solving. ... More

All News

Oct. 21, 2011, 4:24 p.m.

A better way to value the future

New Scientist

Two SFI scientists say in a yet-unpublished paper that "hyperbolic discounting," a mathematical method for valuing future events that has been largely rejected by economists, can be more rational than economists' traditional methods. ... More

All News

Oct. 11, 2011, 1:21 p.m.

Yoda grammar: Ancient sentences likely ended with verbs

USA Today

The proto-language from which most modern languages descended likely featured a sentence structure in which the verb came last, say SFI's Murray Gell-Mann and Stanford's Merritt Ruhlen. ... More

All News

Oct. 6, 2011, 9:59 a.m.

Mapping the academic landscape

Boston Globe

With tens of thousands of scientific papers published every month, it is difficult for today's scientists to keep up. SFI External Professor Carl Bergstrom and colleagues are developing a way to visualize the big trends across the academic landscape. ... More

All News

Oct. 6, 2011, 12:20 p.m.

Earthquake prediction contest: Tremor forecasting isn't anybody's guess

Results of the first-ever earthquake prediction contest are in, and they confirm that picking future epicenters isn't anybody's guess. Of the entrants, a UC Davis team that includes SFI External Professor John Rundle was among the best. ... More

All News

Sept. 30, 2011, 11:32 a.m.

Video: Questions of time, life, change, acceleration, & stability

Scientific American

At the Foundational Questions Institute’s recent conference on the nature of time, three SFI scientists offered perspectives from their respective fields. Watch their presentations here. ... More

All News

Sept. 20, 2011, 1:10 p.m.

New book surveys today's scientific understanding of evolution

A new book co-edited by SFI External Professor Stefan Thurner draws from math, physics, biochemistry, and cell biology to provide a comprehensive survey of today’s scientific understanding of evolution. ... More

All News

Sept. 29, 2011, 11:05 a.m.

SFI's Krakauer to lead transdisciplinary Wisconsin Institute for Discovery

SFI's David Krakauer has been named director of the Wisconsin Institute for Discovery at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. SFI Professor Jessica Flack will co-direct the university's new Center for Complex Systems and Collective Computation. ... More

All News

Aug. 9, 2011, 1:34 p.m.

Resident faculty positions: SFI seeks broad, creative, risk-taking, transdisciplinary thinkers

The Santa Fe Institute is seeking nominations and applications for resident faculty positions. ... More

All News

Sept. 26, 2011, 9:21 a.m.

Elegant theories helping some scientists forecast terrorist events

The Economic Times

The Economic Times of India describes the complex systems science principles underlying statistical models some scientists, including former SFI Omidyar Fellow Aaron Clauset, are using to try to forecast terrorist events. ... More

All News

Sept. 26, 2011, 3:05 p.m.

Language: Our cooperative genes talking

Santa Fe New Mexican

All animals communicate, but of all the species on Earth, humans alone have language. SFI External Professor Mark Pagel asks why in a Santa Fe New Mexican article and in a TED Global 2011 video presentation. ... More

All News

Sept. 20, 2011, 2:36 p.m.

New book examines nature of evolutionary innovation

A new book by SFI External Professor Andreas Wagner examines four billion years of evolution for clues about the nature of evolutionary innovation. ... More

All News

Sept. 20, 2011, 1 p.m.

Book examines sudden change in complex systems

Physics treats sudden changes in complex chemical or physical systems as phase transitions. A new book examines phase transition phenomena in a broad range of complex systems, from ecology to society. ... More

All News

Sept. 12, 2011, 5:01 p.m.

Video: Modeling the economy from the ground up

In an Institute for New Economic Thinking video interview, SFI Professor Doyne Farmer discusses work to create an agent-based model of the U.S. economy that will help scientists, economists, and policy makers better understand past, and future, financial crises. ... More

All News

Sept. 12, 2011, 11:50 a.m.

Maintaining the peace via immune system dynamics

PLoS One

A healthy society keeps aggressive individuals in check, just as a healthy immune system controls infection. New research by SFI scientists reveals an efficient means of containing conflict at many levels, from cells to societies. ... More

All News

Sept. 13, 2011, 12:22 p.m.

Video: 'Urban metabolism' defines & constrains all cities

Humanity’s greatest social innovation is the city, says The Atlantic. The article mentions SFI research that finds surprising statistical regularities among cities, patterns the researchers relate to an underlying "urban metabolism." Watch the video here. ... More

All News

Aug. 30, 2011, 9:48 a.m.

Video: Cognitive ubiquity - The evolution of intelligence on Earth

Stanislaw Ulam Memorial Lecture Series

In three Community Lectures over three nights, SFI Professor David Krakauer explored extraordinarily convergent theories from math, physics, computation, and biology describing the emergence of intelligence on Earth. Watch or download the lectures here.  ... More

All News

Aug. 31, 2011, 2:25 p.m.

Video: Unraveling the chemistry of life

Omidyar Fellowship

In a short video profile, SFI Omidyar Fellow Rogier Braakman describes his quest to reveal how chemistry evolved in the universe, from interstellar clouds to living organisms here on Earth. Watch it here. ... More

All News

Aug. 31, 2011, 1:38 p.m.

Video: Modeling the decline of an endangered language

Omidyar Fellowship

In a short video, SFI Omidyar Fellow Anne Kandler describes her research to model mathematically the decline of the Gaelic language of Scotland in search of insights about how endangered cultures might be preserved. Watch it here. ... More

All News

Aug. 29, 2011, 3:59 p.m.

New blog: What's happening in complexity science

Exploring Complexity blog

A new blog by SFI External Professor Melanie Mitchell sorts the "fluff from the stuff" in complexity science. ... More

All News

Publications

  • Discrete Epidemic Models
    Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering
    2010 vol.7 no.1 , 15 page(s) [MORE]
  • Exploring Biological Network Structure with Clustered Random Networks
    BMC Bionformatics
    2010 vol.10 no.15 , 15 page(s) [MORE]
  • Quantum Algorithms for Simon's Problem over Nonabelian Groups
    ACM Transactions on Algorithms
    2010 vol.6 no.1 , 5 page(s) [MORE]
  • Reply to Adams: Multi-Dimensional Edge Inference
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
    2010 vol.107 no.9 [MORE]
  • Synchronized Chaos in Networks of Simple Units
    European Physical Society
    2010 vol.89 no.2 , 6 page(s) [MORE]

Research Summary

Computation has been a central theme of SFI research since its inception, including seminal contributions in evolutionary and adaptive computation, relationships between physics and computation, models of distributed and collective agent-based computation, and applications of biological insights to engineered computational systems.

People

Robert Axtell

External Professor

Professor , George Mason University, Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study, Department of Computational Social Science

View Profile

Nihat Ay

External Professor

Leader of Max Planck Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences

View Profile

Sander (F.A.) Bais

External Professor

Professor, University of Amsterdam, Institute for Theoretical Physics

View Profile

Carl Bergstrom

External Professor

Professor, University of Washington, Dept. of Biology

View Profile

Elizabeth Bradley

Science Board, External Professor

Professor, University of Colorado, Department of Computer Science and Electrical and Computer Engineering

View Profile

James P. Crutchfield

External Professor

Director, Complexity Sciences Center, Professor of Physics, University of California, Davis, Complexity Sciences Center and Physics

View Profile

Raissa D'Souza

External Professor

Professor, University of California, Davis, Department of Mechanical and Aeronautical Engineering

View Profile

Tanya Elliott

Omidyar Fellow

View Profile

Jessica Flack

External Professor, Santa Fe Institute

Co-Director, Center for Complexity and Collectiive Computation, Wisconsin Institute of Discovery, University of Wisconsin, Madison

View Profile

Walter Fontana

Science Board, External Professor

Professor of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Systems Biology

View Profile

Stephanie Forrest

Science Board Co-Chair, External Professor

Professor and Dept. Chair, University of New Mexico, Computer Science

View Profile

Murray Gell-Mann

Trustee, Science Board

Distinguished Fellow, Santa Fe Institute

View Profile

James Hartle

External Professor

Research Professor and Professor of Physics Emeritus, University of California, Santa Barbara

View Profile

Juris Hartmanis

Science Board

Professor Emeritus, Cornell University

View Profile

John H. Holland

Trustee, Science Board, External Professor

Professor, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Computer Science/Engineering/Psychology

View Profile

Ray Jackendoff

External Professor

Seth Merrin Professor of Philosophy, Co-Director, Center for Cognitive Studies, Tufts University, Department of Philosophy

View Profile

Jürgen Jost

External Professor

Director, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences

View Profile

David Krakauer

External Professor, Santa Fe Institute

Director, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin Institute for Discovery

View Profile

Seth Lloyd

Science Board, External Professor

Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering

View Profile

Stephan Mertens

External Professor

Professor, Otto-von-Guericke Universität Magdeburg, Theoretische Physik

View Profile

John H. Miller

External Professor

Professor of Economics and Social Sciences; Head, Carnegie Mellon University, Social and Decision Sciences

View Profile

Melanie Mitchell

Science Board, External Professor

Professor, Portland State University, Computer Science

View Profile

Cristopher Moore

Professor, Santa Fe Institute

Professor, University of New Mexico, Computer Science, Physics and Astronomy

View Profile

Michel Morvan

External Professor

IXXI-Complex Systems Institute-LIP-Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon, Computer Science

View Profile

Béla Nagy

Postdoctoral Fellow, Santa Fe Institute

View Profile

Mark Newman

Science Board, External Professor

Paul Dirac Collegiate Professor of Physics, University of Michigan, Physics and Complex Systems

View Profile

Kazuo Nishimura

External Professor

Professor, Kyoto University, Institute of Economic Research, Kyoto University

View Profile

Dan Rockmore

External Professor

Professor, Dartmouth College, Mathematics and Computer Science

View Profile

Donald Saari

Science Board

Distinguished Professor; Director, Institute for Mathematical Behavioral Science, University of California-Irvine, Mathematics and Economics

View Profile

Peter Schuster

External Professor

Professor emeritus, University of Vienna, Theoretical Chemistry

View Profile

Cosma Shalizi

External Professor

Assistant Professor, Carnegie Mellon University, Statistics Department

View Profile

D. Eric Smith

External Professor

View Profile

Ricard Solé

External Professor

ICREA-Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Life Sciences

View Profile

Charles Stevens

Science Board, External Professor

Professor and Vincent J. Coates Chair in Molecular Neurobiology, The Salk Institute, Molecular Neurobiology Laboratory

View Profile

Stefan Thurner

External Professor

Head of Complex Systems Research Group, Medical University of Vienna

View Profile

Joseph Traub

External Professor

Edwin Howard Armstrong Professor of Computer Science, Columbia University, Computer Science

View Profile

Douglas R. White

External Professor

Professor Emeritus, Anthropology, University of California-Irvine, Institute of Mathematical Behavioral Science

View Profile

Chris Wood

Vice President, Administration and Director, Business Network, Santa Fe Institute

View Profile

Hyejin Youn

Postdoctoral Fellow, Physics

View Profile

Events

More Events