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Displaying 10 of 44 results for "Manuel Balaguera" clear search

Emmanuel Labarbe Member since: Mon, Nov 04, 2013 at 10:13 AM

PhD

Manuel Chica Member since: Tue, Nov 05, 2013 at 08:46 AM

PhD Computer Science

Daniel Heard Member since: Sun, Apr 27, 2014 at 07:06 PM

PhD, Statistical Science, Duke University, MS, Statistical Science, Duke University, MA, Mathematics, St. Louis University, BS, Mathematics, Arizona State University

Emmanuel Dubois Member since: Fri, May 02, 2014 at 05:30 PM

Shelby Manney Member since: Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 08:20 PM

BA - English, BS - Anthropology (Archaeoinformatics - GIS, Applied Stats, Data Mang.,CRM CERT), BFA - Music, BA - Writing & Rhetoric, MA - Technical, Professional, & Science Writing (TPSW - Cert), MS - Cultural Studies in Applied Sciences (Philosophy of Science - Archaeology/Semiotics Focus), MA - Anthropology

General Question:
Without Central Control is self organization possible?

Specific Case:

Considering the seemingly preplanned, densely aggregated communities of the prehistoric Puebloan Southwest, is it possible that without centralized authority (control), that patches of low-density communities dispersed in a bounded landscape could quickly self-organize and construct preplanned, highly organized, prehistoric villages/towns?

Derek Robinson Member since: Wed, Nov 05, 2014 at 03:59 PM Full Member

The goal of my research program is to improve our understanding about highly integrated natural and human processes. Within the context of Land-System Science, I seek to understand how natural and human systems interact through feedback mechanisms and affect land management choices among humans and ecosystem (e.g., carbon storage) and biophysical processes (e.g., erosion) in natural systems. One component of this program involves finding novel methods for data collection (e.g., unmanned aerial vehicles) that can be used to calibrate and validate models of natural systems at the resolution of decision makers. Another component of this program involves the design and construction of agent-based models to formalize our understanding of human decisions and their interaction with their environment in computer code. The most exciting, and remaining part, is coupling these two components together so that we may not only quantify the impact of representing their coupling, but more importantly to assess the impacts of changing climate, technology, and policy on human well-being, patterns of land use and land management, and ecological and biophysical aspects of our environment.

To achieve this overarching goal, my students and I conduct fieldwork that involves the use of state-of-the-art unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in combination with ground-based light detection and ranging (LiDAR) equipment, RTK global positioning system (GPS) receivers, weather and soil sensors, and a host of different types of manual measurements. We bring these data together to make methodological advancements and benchmark novel equipment to justify its use in the calibration and validation of models of natural and human processes. By conducting fieldwork at high spatial resolutions (e.g., parcel level) we are able to couple our representation of natural system processes at the scale at which human actors make decisions and improve our understanding about how they react to changes and affect our environment.

land use; land management; agricultural systems; ecosystem function; carbon; remote sensing; field measurements; unmanned aerial vehicle; human decision-making; erosion, hydrological, and agent-based modelling

Miguel Pais Member since: Wed, Apr 08, 2015 at 11:18 AM Full Member Reviewer

PhD in Marine Biology, MSc in Ecology and Environmental Management

My research focuses on applied marine ecology and environmental management, particularly with coastal fish assemblages. Research interests include fish ecology, environmental monitoring and assessment methodology and individual-based models.

Manuela Vinai Member since: Wed, Nov 04, 2015 at 07:21 AM

Graduate

Social research - Anthropologist - Simulation of a public counter

Daniel Formolo Member since: Fri, Jun 10, 2016 at 11:46 AM

PhD Student

PhD student in the Agent Systems Research Group of the Department of Artificial Intelligence at the VU University Amsterdam. Current research focuses on Modeling Human Behavior and exploring Serious Games interactions with humans.

Daniel Ciganda Member since: Fri, Jul 15, 2016 at 09:42 AM

MA.

I use Agent-Based Models to understand contemporary fertility decision making in below-replacement fertility contexts.

Displaying 10 of 44 results for "Manuel Balaguera" clear search

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