Professor Stefan Thurner
Stefan
Thurner, 2 Ph.D.s is full professor for Science of Complex Systems
at
the Medical University of Vienna, where he founded the Complex Systems
Research Group (now Section for Science of Complex Systems) in 2003.
Since 2007 he is also external professor at the Santa Fe
institute.
After earning his Ph.D. in theoretical physics at the Technical
University of
Vienna in 1995, he held postdoc research positions at Humboldt
Universität zu Berlin and Boston University before he joined the
University of Vienna in 1999 and later Medical University. In 2001 he
got a second Ph.D. in economics at the University of Vienna and his
Habilitation in theoretical physics. About this time — strongly
influenced by visits to the Santa Fe Institute — he began to shift
his
focus from theoretical physics to biological and complex systems, which
are now his main areas of scientific work.
Since 1995 Stefan has published more than 120 scientific articles in
fundamental physics (topological excitations in quantum field theories,
alternative entropy formulations), applied mathematics (wavelet
statistics, fractal harmonic analysis, diffusion processes), complex
systems (network theory, evolutionary systems), life sciences (heart
beat
dynamics, gene regulatory networks, cell motility, bioinformatics),
econophysics (price formation, banking regulation, systemic risk) and
lately in social sciences (opinion formation and bureaucratic
inefficiency). He holds 2 patents.
Stefan has co-organized several international workshops, conferences
and summer schools, and has himself presented more than 150 talks. His
work has received broad interest from the media such as the New York
Times, BBC world, Nature, New Scientist, Physics World and is featured
in more than 100 newspaper, radio, and television reports. He works in a
network of scientists mostly around the Santa Fe Institute, the
Collegium Budapest, where he was a fellow in 2007, and several European
initiatives, such as COST actions, where he serves as the Austrian
delegate. He serves as a member of several scientific boards.
He coedited
Principles of Evolution: From the Planck Epoch to Complex
Multicellular Life and coauthored
Traffic on complex networks: Towards understanding global statistical
properties from microscopic density fluctuations,
Analysis, synthesis, and estimation of fractal-rate
stochastic point processes,
Multiresolution Wavelet Analysis of Heartbeat Intervals Discriminates
Healthy Patients from Those with Cardiac Pathology,
Information Super-Diffusion on Structured Networks, and
Multirelational organization of large-scale social networks in an
online world.
Read the
full list of his publications!
Apart from science, he has been active in quantitative financial
consulting for financial institutions since 2003 in particular for
automated trading strategies. In 1993 he founded a non-professional
chamber music group for which he still plays the clarinet.
Watch
Anatomy of Financial Crisis.
Read
Mars and Venus Online: How the Genders Differ in Their Use of Social
Networks.