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Displaying 10 of 557 results for "Ian M Hamilton" clear search

Rainer Hilscher Member since: Fri, Sep 17, 2010 at 04:22 PM Full Member

PhD in Computer Science, University of Sussex, UK

Francisco Miguel Quesada Member since: Mon, May 09, 2011 at 11:33 PM Full Member

Ph.D. in Political Sciences and Sociology

Marvin Nebel Member since: Thu, May 16, 2013 at 12:54 PM

B. Sc. in Applied System Science

Rubén Darío Villota Galeano Member since: Tue, Sep 25, 2018 at 07:49 PM

Researcher in Computational Social Sciences

Computational Social Sciences

Joseph Luchman Member since: Thu, Jan 18, 2024 at 08:22 PM

PhD in Industrial Organizational Psychology, George Mason University

Career Progression; Job Characteristics; Occupational Stress and Health

Xin Gu Member since: Fri, Mar 28, 2014 at 01:51 AM

Bachelor in Informaiton Science with Honours

agent-based modelling

E Reed Member since: Mon, Jul 28, 2014 at 03:02 AM

Computational Social Science

Agent Based Models used in policy analysis

Kotte Hewa Dinithini Member since: Thu, Jan 26, 2017 at 07:56 AM

Mathematical Finance

Currently doing Agent based model in biogy

Lisa Frazier Member since: Thu, Oct 08, 2015 at 12:21 PM

MPH, PhD Candidate

My research interests include policy informatics and decision making, modeling in policy analysis and management decisions, public health management and policy, and the role of public value in policy development. I am particularly interested in less mainstream approaches to modeling that account for learning, feedback, and other systems dynamics. I include Bayesian inference, agent-based models, and behavioral assumptions in both my research and teaching.
In my dissertation research, I conceptualize state Medicaid programs as complex adaptive systems characterized by diverse actors, behaviors, relationships, and objectives. These systems reproduce themselves through both strategic and emergent mechanisms of program management. I focus on the mechanism by which citizens are sorted into or out of the system: program enrollment. Using Bayesian regression and agent-based models, I explore the role of administrative practices (such as presumptive eligibility and longer continuous eligibility periods) in increasing enrollment of eligible citizens into Medicaid programs.

William Kennedy Member since: Wed, Mar 10, 2010 at 06:47 PM Full Member

BS, MS, PhD

Dr. William G. Kennedy, “Bill,” is continuing to learn in a third career, this time as an academic, a computational social scientist.

His first a career was in military service as a Naval Officer, starting with the Naval Academy, Naval PostGraduate School (as the first computer science student from the Naval Academy), and serving during the Cold War as part of the successful submarine-based nuclear deterrent. After six years of active duty service, he served over two decades in the Naval Reserves commanding three submarine and submarine-related reserve units and retiring after 30 years as a Navy Captain with several personal honors and awards.

His second career was in civilian public service: 10 years at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and 15 years with the Department of Energy. At the NRC he rose to be an advisor to the Executive Director for Operations and the authority on issues concerning the reliance on human operators for reactor safety, participating in two fly-away accident response teams. He left the NRC for a promotion and to lead, as technical director, the entrepreneurial effort to explore the use of light-water and accelerator technologies for the production of nuclear weapons materials. That work led to him becoming the senior policy officer responsible for strategic planning and Departmental performance commitments, leading development of the first several DOE strategic plans and formal performance agreements between the Secretary of Energy and the President.

Upon completion of doctoral research in Artificial Intelligence outside of his DOE work, he began his third career as a scientist. That started with a fully funded, three-year post-doctoral research position in cognitive robotics at the Naval Research Laboratory sponsored by the National Academy of Science and expanding his AI background with research in experimental Cognitive Science. Upon completion, he joined the Center for Social Complexity, part of the Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study at George Mason University in 2008 where he is now the Senior Scientific Advisor. His research interests range from cognition at the individual level to models of millions of agents representing individual people. He is currently leading a multi-year project to characterize the reaction of the population of a mega-city to a nuclear WMD (weapon of mass destruction) event.

Dr. Kennedy holds a B.S. in mathematics from the U.S. Naval Academy, and Master of Science in Computer Science from the Naval PostGraduate School, and a Ph.D. in Information Technology from George Mason University and has a current security clearance. Dr. Kennedy is a member of Sigma Xi, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), and a life member of Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. He is a STEM volunteer with the Senior Scientists and Engineers/AAAS Volunteer Program for K-12 science, technology, engineering, and mathematics education in the DC-area schools.

Cognitive Science, Computational Social Science, Social Cognition, Autonomy, Cognitive Robotics

Displaying 10 of 557 results for "Ian M Hamilton" clear search

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