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Displaying 8 of 168 results for "Michel De Garine-Wichatitsky" clear search

carstos Member since: Wed, Sep 05, 2012 at 08:08 AM

PhD

maxxb77 Member since: Wed, Oct 03, 2012 at 02:31 PM

B.S. NDSU Economics and Statistics, M.S. University of Maine Resource Economics and Policy

Erasmo Batta Member since: Tue, Oct 23, 2012 at 06:14 PM

Master in Complex Systems, The University of Warwick, Bachelor in Physics, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

Claudine Gravel-Miguel Member since: Thu, Nov 01, 2012 at 04:25 PM Full Member Reviewer

M.A., Anthropology, University of Victoria, Ph.D., Anthropology, Arizona State University

Dr. Gravel-Miguel currently works as a Postdoctoral Research Scholar for the Institute of Human Origins at Arizona State University. She does research in Archaeology and focuses on the Upper Paleolithic of Southwest Europe. She currently works on projects ranging from cultural transmission to human-environment interactions in prehistory.

Archaeology, GIS, ABM, social networks, portable art, ornaments, data science

Mauro Eidi Assano Member since: Mon, Nov 05, 2012 at 05:36 PM

Msc Computer Science, MBA

Distributed computing modeling, multi-agent computing models, economic and financial models, healthcare chronic disease models

Caryl Benjamin Member since: Wed, Dec 12, 2012 at 10:04 AM

BS Community Development

Community assembly after intervention by coral transplantation

The potential of transplantation of scleractinian corals in restoring degraded reefs has been widely recognized. Levels of success of coral transplantation have been highly variable due to variable environmental conditions and interactions with other reef organisms. The community structure of the area being restored is an emergent outcome of the interaction of its components as well as of processes at the local level. Understanding the
coral reef as a complex adaptive system is essential in understanding how patterns emerge from processes at local scales. Data from a coral transplantation experiment will be used to develop an individual-based model of coral community development. The objectives of the model are to develop an understanding of assembly rules, predict trajectories and discover unknown properties in the development of coral reef communities in the context of reef restoration. Simulation experiments will be conducted to derive insights on community trajectories under different disturbance regimes as well as initial transplantation configurations. The model may also serve as a decision-support tool for reef restoration.

Gustavo Landfried Member since: Sun, Dec 30, 2012 at 03:29 AM

Equivalent to MA in social anthropology

Displaying 8 of 168 results for "Michel De Garine-Wichatitsky" clear search

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