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Displaying 10 of 538 results for "Ian M Hamilton" clear search

Cobus Van Rooyen Member since: Tue, Apr 16, 2013 at 03:44 PM Full Member

Colin Wren Member since: Tue, Apr 16, 2013 at 07:01 PM Full Member Reviewer

B.A., Anthropology, McGill University, M.Sc., GIS and Spatial Analysis in Archaeology, University College London, Ph.D., Archaeology, McGill University

Currently Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of Colorado Colorado Springs. I took my first modelling class in Repast with Dr. Mark Lake as part of my M. Sc. at UCL. After a workshop with Dr. Luke Premo and Dr. Anne Kandler, I moved to NetLogo and haven’t looked back.

Find our recent textbook, Agent-based modeling for Archaeology: Simulating the Complexity of Societies here: https://santafeinstitute.github.io/ABMA/

Adrian Groza Member since: Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 12:10 PM

Phd in Computer Science

Flexible agent communication
Argumentation in multi-agent systems
Knowledge representation and reasoning
Ontologies for agents
Mediation and Dispute Resolution

Samantha Dobbie Member since: Tue, Apr 30, 2013 at 02:34 PM

MRes in Conservation and Utlisation of Plant Genetic Resources, BSc in Biological Sciences with Honours in Plant Sciences

Thomas Hilton Member since: Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 03:54 PM Full Member

Phil Riris Member since: Wed, May 01, 2013 at 01:32 AM Full Member

BA Archaeology, MA Archaeology, PhD Archaeology (in progress)

Timothy Gooding Member since: Wed, May 15, 2013 at 10:29 AM

BA Economics, York University Canada, PhD Economics Kingston University London

After being the economic development officer for the Little/Salmon Carmacks First Nation, Tim used all his spare time trying to determine a practical understanding of the events he witnessed. This led him to complexity, specifically human emergent behaviour and the evolutionary prerequisites present in human society. These prerequisites predicted many of the apparently immutable ‘modern problems’ in society. First, he tried disseminating the knowledge in popular book form, but that failed – three times. He decided to obtain PhD to make his ‘voice’ louder. He chose sociology, poorly as it turns out as he was told his research had ‘no academic value whatsoever’. After being forced out of University, he taught himself agent-based modelling to demonstrate his ideas and published his first peer-reviewed paper without affiliation while working as a warehouse labourer. Subsequently, he managed to interest Steve Keen in his ideas and his second attempt at a PhD succeeded. His most recent work involves understanding the basic forces generated by trade in a complex system. He is most interested in how the empirically present evolutionary prerequisites impact market patterns.

Economics, society, complexity, systems, ecosystem, thermodynamics, agent-based modelling, emergent behaviour, evolution.

Marvin Nebel Member since: Thu, May 16, 2013 at 12:54 PM

B. Sc. in Applied System Science

Carlos M Fernández-Márquez Member since: Fri, May 17, 2013 at 04:19 PM

Ph.D., Economics, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Degree in Economics, Degree in Computer Science

ABM applied to socio-economic systems: opinion evolution, industry dynamics, spatial models of voting, diffusion of innovations, macroeconomic with microfoundations, etc.

Teije Donker Member since: Wed, May 29, 2013 at 04:08 PM

Msc Political and Social Sciences, European University Institute

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.

Displaying 10 of 538 results for "Ian M Hamilton" clear search

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