Hierarchy in networks could have emerged at random
In PNAS, SFI External Professor Ricard Solé and colleagues at Pompeu Fabra University argue that much of the hierarchy in the world could have emerged at random.
The latest news and events at the Santa Fe Institute
In PNAS, SFI External Professor Ricard Solé and colleagues at Pompeu Fabra University argue that much of the hierarchy in the world could have emerged at random.
SFI External Professor Elisabeth Wood describes the phenomena of rape, torture, and other civilian abuse during wartime. Hear her interview on the Santa Fe Radio Cafe.
Laura Fortunato is among researchers studying the evolution of language and words -- and cultural practices -- much as biologists study how living organisms evolve, according to a New Scientist cover story.
In a September 30 Business Network topical meeting in London, participants explored the evolution of the modern corporation, the corporate life cycle, the impact of globalization, and the relationship between corporations and other major social institutions.
Research led by SFI Chair of Faculty Jennifer Dunne is among 21 new projects being funded by the NSF to develop a better understanding of how humans and the environment interact.
As the Institute approaches its 30th year, a group of distinguished scientists recently took time to revisit and build on questions of emergence.
Graduate students and postdocs participating in SFI's 2013 Complex Systems Summer School collaborated to develop some 15 original research papers. See their research.
An article in the Science Careers section of the journal Science describes the challenges of cross-disciplinary collaboration, mentioning SFI as a research center that has successfully formalized the practice of working across disciplines.
SFI's Murray Gell-Mann discusses what it means to think like a scientist, the value of rejecting orthodoxy, complex systems science and theory, and intelligent life on other planets, among other topics.
SFI External Professor W. Brian Arthur explores how new technology is created, and how closely evolutionary processes in technology mirror those from biology.
An article in The Guardian about ways to build sustainable cities offers advice from several experts, beginning with SFI Professor Luis Bettencourt.
Network theorists usually assume blackouts spread the same way diseases do – by close contact – but for power grids “the relevant network is not the physical network” of lines and towers and transfer stations, says SFI Professor Cris Moore.
SFI is seeking nominations and applications for the Cowan Chair in Human Social Dynamics. Apply by November 1, 2013.
In a column in Forbes, SFI Trustee John Chisholm asks whether the theoretical, scientific study of complex systems can inform the hardscrabble world of start-up firms.
External Professor David Wolpert joined SFI's resident faculty on a half-time basis on Monday, September 9, 2013. He also is a member of Los Alamos National Laboratory's Information Sciences Group.
Wikipedia acts a bit like one big brain, its editors working independently, yet somehow together performing an enormous cooperative computation, according to an article about Simon DeDeo's research.
In a recent paper, SFI's Marcus Hamilton and colleagues examined 296 projectile points from two New Mexico clusters of Clovis artifacts, linking the two encampments by the workmanship and materials.
The city is no longer just a place but a living field of information to be harvested, according to an article that cites early work at SFI to see if Kleiber's Law helped describe cities.
Harper's Jeff Madrick pans 40 years of "dubious" economic policies originating at Harvard and reviews the history of "alternative economics," starting with SFI Professor Sam Bowles's move from Harvard to UMass Amherst in 1972.
A three-week workshop at SFI ending today assembled economists, biologists, physicists, engineers, archaeologists, and anthropologists for discussions about new ways to quantify, analyze, and model technological development.