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FACULTY
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Stephen
Wolfram is the author of A New Kind
of Science and the principal lecturer at the Summer School. He
is the founder and CEO of Wolfram
Research, and the creator of Mathematica.
Having started in science as a teenager (he got his PhD at age 20),
Wolfram had a highly successful early career in academia. He began his
work on NKS in 1981, and spent ten years writing the NKS book,
published in 2002. Over the course of 30 years Wolfram has mentored a
large number of individuals who have achieved great success in
academia, business, and elsewhere. Starting the NKS Summer School was
his first formal educational undertaking in sixteen years. |
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Directors
Todd Rowland is the NKS Summer School's academic
director, while Catherine Boucher works as program director. |
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Todd Rowland assisted Stephen Wolfram with mathematical issues
found in A New Kind of Science Chapters 5, 9, and 12. Before joining the NKS team in
2001, he wrote entries for MathWorld. Todd received his
PhD from the University of Chicago in 1999, where he studied
traditional mathematics such as algebraic and differential
geometry. Currently, he is managing editor of Complex
Systems. His interests include automated theorem proving,
the fundamental theory, and NKS education.
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Catherine Boucher joined Wolfram Research in 1998. She led
project management during the production of A New Kind of
Science and is currently the Special Projects Director for Wolfram
Research. Catherine received her PhD in applied mathematics from
the University of Massachusetts Amherst, specializing in cluster
analysis.
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Instructors
The following people are both
lecturers and project advisors to the participants of the Summer
School. |
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Tommaso Bolognesi has a
laurea in physics from Università degli studi di Pavia and an
MS in computer science from the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, and has worked at the Italian National Research
Council (CNR) since 1977 on computer music and design of concurrent
systems. He has published a number of papers, participated in several
national and European projects, helped run international conferences
and workshops, and contributed to the definition of the ISO-standard
LOTOS language. As a
2005 NKS Summer School student he
researched process algebra and Petri nets. Most of his efforts are now on
NKS-related topics, in particular on discrete models of space and
spacetime based on graph rewriting (A
New Kind of Science, Chapter 9).
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Jason Cawley has been talking to
Stephen Wolfram about the ideas in A New Kind of Science and
reading early drafts of the work for over 15 years. In the last few
years before publication, Jason worked for Wolfram Research as a
research assistant on historical and philosophical issues, including
many topics covered in the notes. Jason's graduate studies were in
political science at the University of Chicago, and his wide-ranging
interests include philosophy, social science, and the history of
thought. The developer of the NKS Forum, he has been its
most active Wolfram Research participant, answering user questions
about NKS. He also works on applications of NKS ideas in the social
sciences, arts, and humanities.
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Paul-Jean Letourneau attended
the 2004 NKS Summer
School, where he completed a pure NKS project on elementary
cellular automata with memory. He has been an instructor at the Summer School since
2005. His 2004 project developed into his master's thesis in
theoretical physics, "Statistical Mechanics of Cellular Automata with
Memory." He has worked in several industrial and academic
laboratories around North America, where he made original contributions to real-world problems in medical imaging, geophysical seismic imaging, protein structure prediction, and DNA-protein
interactions. Paul-Jean now works as a software engineer at Wolfram
Research.
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Eric
Rowland was a student at the NKS
Summer School 2003 and has since continued NKS-informed research.
His paper "Local Nested Structure in Rule 30" is part of a larger
research program to understand various types of nestedness in cellular
automata and related systems. To this end he has also studied number
theoretic properties of additive cellular automata. More recently, he
proved that a simple recurrence discovered at the Summer School
generates only ones and primes. In summer 2006 he worked as an R&D Fellow
at Wolfram Research. He is currently a PhD student in the mathematics
department at Rutgers University.
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Michael Schreiber received his PhD from Vienna University of
Economics and Business Administration (WU) for his dissertation on support
systems for university development. He has consulted for various organizations
and taught marketing at WU. Throughout his career he has made many and
various contributions to art events and systems conferences in Europe. For
the last several years he has engaged in NKS research using
Mathematica. He is currently a research associate at Wolfram
Research, and has authored more than 300 Demonstrations.
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Matthew
Szudzik made significant contributions
to A New Kind of Science from 1998 through 2000 and during
the summer of 2001 as a research assistant to Stephen Wolfram. His
work focused primarily on the analysis of simple programs and on the
theoretical foundations of computational mathematics. He is currently
a graduate student at Carnegie Mellon University, working toward
a PhD in mathematical logic. |
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Enrique Zeleny is a physicist from the Autonomous
University of Puebla, with a master's degree in Quantum Cosmology. He
attended the NKS Summer School 2005,
with a project about
causal networks generated by Turing machines. He researched recursive
sequences and Turing machines, and prepared artwork for the NKS
Conferences in 2006 and 2007. Currently, he contributes actively
to The Wolfram Demonstrations Project, with nearly a hundred
Demonstrations in a variety of subjects from designs for neckties and
stalactites formation to chaos in black holes, including some research
in NKS systems.
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Hector Zenil joined Wolfram Research as an R&D fellow in 2006. He
graduated with a BS in math from the National University of Mexico
(UNAM) and with a master's degree in logic (LoPhiSS) from the
Sorbonne. He is a graduate student at Lille 1 and Paris 1 universities
in computer science and philosophy of science, respectively, both on
algorithmic complexity and randomness. Currently he is a visiting
research scholar at Carnegie Mellon University.
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