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BSc in Economics, BSc in Nutrition and PhD in Nutrition and Health Economics from the University of Sao Paulo (USP), Brazil. Professor of Economics and Public Policy at the School of Arts, Sciences and Humanities (EACH-USP). Co-founder and supervisor of the Complex Systems Modeling Graduate Program since 2010 (EACH-USP).
My research interests focus on applications of agent-based models directed to the economic evaluation of public policies on food, nutrition, and health, and computational simulations in the interface of food systems and health systems.
My research focuses on building a systemic understanding of coupled human-natural systems. In particular, I am interested in understanding how patterns of land-use and land-cover change emerge from human alterations of natural processes and the resulting feedbacks. Study systems of interest include those undergoing agricultural to urban conversion, typically known as urban sprawl, and those in which protective measures, such as wildfire suppression or flood/storm impact controls, can lead to long-term instability.
Dynamic agent- and process-based simulation models are my primary tools for studying human and natural systems, respectively. My past work includes the creation of dynamic, process-based simulation models of the wildland fires along the urban-wildland interface (UWI), and artificial dune construction to protect coastal development along a barrier island coastline. My current research involves the testing, refinement, extension of an economic agent-based model of coupled housing and land markets (CHALMS), and a new project developing a generalized agent-based model of land-use change to explore local human-environmental interactions globally.
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