Displaying 10 of 222 results for "Brian Mac Namee" clear search
My main research field is health economic modeling with the main focus on sexually transmitted diseases. We are trying to build a agent-based model using the FLAME-framework (www.flame.ac.uk).
PhD student in The Robert Zajonc Institute for Social Studies at the University of Warsaw.
network science; social networks; sociology; complex systems; ecological psychology; cognitive science; perception and action
I use Agent-Based Models to understand contemporary fertility decision making in below-replacement fertility contexts.
My research interests fall at the intersection of Middle East area studies and political sociology. I am interested in the interaction between regime repression and contentious mobilization in (mostly Arab) authoritarian regimes.
I work at the intersection of archaeology and artificial intelligence, applying computational modelling to some of prehistory’s hardest questions. My doctoral research used agent-based modelling combined with genetic algorithms to explore the behavioural and biological characteristics of Neanderthals — treating ancient populations not as static artefacts but as dynamic systems that can be interrogated through simulation.
My work reflects a broader conviction: that AI and machine learning are not just tools imported from other disciplines, but frameworks that can reshape how archaeologists ask questions and interpret the past.
Simulation of past hominins in a realistic setting, software design, Artificial Intelligence application
Andrew J. Collins, Ph.D., is an associate 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 $5 million. Dr. Collins has developed several research simulations including an award-winning investigation into the foreclosure contagion that incorporated social networks.
Agent-based Modeling
Agent-based simulation
Cooperative Game Theory
Behavior modeling
PhD student at University of Toronto: memes, social networks, contagion, agent based modeling, synthetic populations
Displaying 10 of 222 results for "Brian Mac Namee" clear search