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Displaying 10 of 32 results for "Liccia Romero" clear search

Kimberly Rogers Member since: Wed, Dec 06, 2017 at 03:56 AM Full Member

Environmental Engineering, PhD, Geological Sciences, Physical Geography, BSc, Music and Music Production, AASc

Dr. Kimberly G. Rogers studies the coupled human-natural processes shaping coastal environments. She obtained a B.Sc. in Geological Sciences from the University of Texas at Austin and began her graduate studies on Long Island at Stony Brook University’s School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences. Rogers completed her Ph.D. at Vanderbilt University, where she specialized in nearshore and coastal sediment transport. She was a postdoctoral scholar and research associate at the Institute for Arctic and Alpine Research at the University of Colorado Boulder. In 2014, her foundation in the physical sciences was augmented by training in Environmental Anthropology at Indiana University Bloomington through an NSF Science, Engineering, and Education for Sustainability (SEES) Fellowship.

Rogers’s research is broadly interdisciplinary and examines evolving sediment dynamics at the land-sea boundary, principally within the rapidly developing river deltas of South Asia. As deltas are some of the most densely populated coastal regions on earth, she incorporates social science methods to examine how institutions — particularly those governing land use and built infrastructure — influence the flow of water and sediment in coastal areas. She integrates quantitative and qualitative approaches in her work, such as direct measurement and geochemical fingerprinting of sediment transport phenomena, agent-based modeling, institutional and geospatial analyses, and ethnographic survey techniques. Risk holder collaboration is an integral part of her research philosophy and she is committed to co-production and capacity building in her projects. Her work has gained recognition from policy influencers such as the World Bank, USAID, and the US Embassy Bangladesh and has been featured in popular media outlets such as Slate and Environmental Health Perspectives.

Robert Hering Member since: Mon, Mar 19, 2018 at 03:10 PM

Alicia Tenza Peral Member since: Mon, Sep 24, 2018 at 08:36 PM

Robert Paterek Member since: Tue, Mar 05, 2019 at 03:11 PM Full Member

Robert Fligg Member since: Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 09:12 PM Full Member

Szymon Talaga Member since: Tue, Jul 16, 2019 at 10:19 AM Full Member

MSc Psychology

PhD student in The Robert Zajonc Institute for Social Studies at the University of Warsaw.

network science; social networks; sociology; complex systems; ecological psychology; cognitive science; perception and action

Robert Bischoff Member since: Tue, Aug 27, 2019 at 09:42 PM Full Member

Senior Digital Data Specialist at the Center for Archaeology and Society, Arizona State University

Robert Van Paridon Member since: Thu, Jan 16, 2020 at 02:48 AM Full Member

Roger Verhoeven Member since: Sun, Feb 23, 2020 at 02:55 AM Full Member

Roger Cremades Member since: Wed, Apr 01, 2020 at 06:59 AM Full Member

PhD, Natural Sciences, University of Hamburg

Dr. Roger Cremades is a complex systems scientist and heterodox global change economist integrating human-Earth interactions across systems and scales into modular quantitative tools, e.g. connecting drought risks in cities with land use at the river basin scale. He is elected Council member of the Complex Systems Society (2022-2025) and previously served as co-Chair of the Development Team of the Finance and Economics Knowledge-Action Network of Future Earth, the largest global research programme in global change (2020-2022). Roger coordinated research and co-production projects above €1M, and published in top journal like PNAS, Nature Climate Change, and Nature Geoscience. As a scientific modeler in the Social and Ecological Sciences, Roger integrates complex systems concepts into integrated assessment models of global change, with a focus on cities.

The future of CoMSES.Net, in Roger’s vision, is to augment its projection into a hub for discussing state-of-the-art approaches on modeling for the Social and Ecological Sciences, e.g. via bi-annual webinars, so that the Model Library becomes a lighthouse from where all communities developing, sharing, using, and reusing agent-based and other computational models also find valuable discussions to advance their research, education, and computational practice.

Global change, human-Earth interactions, complex systems.

Displaying 10 of 32 results for "Liccia Romero" clear search

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