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I received a Ph.D. in Economics at the University of Namur (Belgium) in June 2012 with a thesis titled “Essays in Information Aggregation and Political Economics”.
After two years at the Research Center for Educational and Network Studies (Recens) of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, I joined the Department of Economics “Marco Biagi” of the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia in January 2015 and then the Department of Agricultural and Food Sciences of the University of Bologna.
I am currently a Lecturer in Financial Computing at the Department Computer Science (Financial Computing and Analytics group) - University College London. Moreover I am an affiliated researcher of the DYNAMETS - Dynamic Systems Analysis for Economic Theory and Society research group and an affiliate member of the Namur Center for Complex Systems (Naxys).
My research interests concern the computational study of financial markets (microstructure, systemic properties and behavioral bias), of social Interactions on complex networks (theory and experiments), the evolution of cooperation in networks (theory and experiments) and the study of companies strategies in the digital economy.
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