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Displaying 10 of 552 results for "Ian M Hamilton" clear search

Pieter Van Oel Member since: Mon, Apr 13, 2015 at 07:11 AM

PhD

I am fascinated by unraveling water-scarcity patterns. I am an expert in Integrated Assessment Modelling and Water Footprint Assessment. The concepts and tools that I have developed and applied all aim at availing knowledge at scales relevant to decision-makers in the water sector. During my PhD at the University of Twente I evaluated how spatiotemporal patterns of water availability relate to patterns of water use for a river basin in the semi-arid Northeast of Brazil. I have used agent-based modelling and developed the downstreamness concept to analyze the emergence of basin closure. This concept is helpful to water managers for identifying priority locations for intervention inside a river basin system. As a postdoc I continued to evaluate the relation between water use and availability and further broadened my scope to a wider range of related topics.

rbandin Member since: Sun, Feb 12, 2012 at 10:02 PM

Master in Fisheries Science, Licensed in Biological Sciences

Modelling of socio-ecological systems and management of common property resources in artisanal fisheries. Population dynamics of coastal marine invertebrates exploited by artisanal fisheries.

Bartosz Bartkowski Member since: Tue, Sep 25, 2018 at 07:20 AM

I am an environmental economist at UFZ - Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research in Leipzig, Germany. I did my PhD (Dr. rer. pol.) in environmental economics at the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg in 2017. Before that, I received my master’s (2013; economics) and bachelor’s degrees (2010; cultural studies) from the same university.

My research focus is on the economic analysis of agri-environmental policy instruments as means to navigate ecosystem service trade-offs in multifunctional landscapes. In this context, I am particularly interested in identifying policy instruments and instrument mixes allowing to align societal preferences with biophysical potential of landscapes to provide multiple ecosystem services. Here, the mutual relationship between regulatory and incentive-based instruments is of much interest. Using agent-based modelling, but also more qualitative approaches, I look at the emerging landscape-level patterns that result from various policy mixes given realistic descriptions of farmers’ behaviour and institutional settings.

Cheddi Kiravu Member since: Tue, Feb 09, 2010 at 08:42 PM

Electrical Power Engineering, Science (Physics, Mathematics, and Education)

Network ABMS in solar technology adoption in households

landerson9 Member since: Thu, Mar 01, 2012 at 05:31 PM

B.A. in Anthropology and Biology from McGill University, M.A. in Anthropology from University of Michigan

Rinko Trinchich Member since: Fri, Jan 15, 2021 at 06:10 PM Full Member

Welcome to my Flekosteel review project. I am interested in engaging more people in the natural ways of joints treatment.

Caryl Benjamin Member since: Wed, Dec 12, 2012 at 10:04 AM

BS Community Development

Community assembly after intervention by coral transplantation

The potential of transplantation of scleractinian corals in restoring degraded reefs has been widely recognized. Levels of success of coral transplantation have been highly variable due to variable environmental conditions and interactions with other reef organisms. The community structure of the area being restored is an emergent outcome of the interaction of its components as well as of processes at the local level. Understanding the
coral reef as a complex adaptive system is essential in understanding how patterns emerge from processes at local scales. Data from a coral transplantation experiment will be used to develop an individual-based model of coral community development. The objectives of the model are to develop an understanding of assembly rules, predict trajectories and discover unknown properties in the development of coral reef communities in the context of reef restoration. Simulation experiments will be conducted to derive insights on community trajectories under different disturbance regimes as well as initial transplantation configurations. The model may also serve as a decision-support tool for reef restoration.

ben_davies Member since: Fri, Mar 30, 2012 at 01:01 AM

MA - University of Auckland - Anthropology, BA - University of Hawaii - Anthropology

-Use of models, including agent-based models, in understanding the formation of surface archaeological deposits in arid Australia
-Individual-based modelling of resource use on marginal islands in Polynesian prehistory
-Individual-based modelling of the influence of serial voyaging events on body proportions in Remote Oceania
-Discrete event simulation of early horticultural production in New Zealand

Vojtech Kase Member since: Fri, Feb 20, 2015 at 01:49 PM Full Member

MA

I am interested in the dynamics of cultural transmission, especially in diffusion of religious innovations (concepts and practices) across a population. In my dissertation, I am targeting this issue while studying and modelling the development of Christian meal practices in the first four centuries CE across the Roman Mediterranean.

John Smart Member since: Fri, Jun 02, 2017 at 10:42 PM

MS, Strategic Foresight, U. Houston, MS Eq, Physiology and Medicine, UC San Diego

Displaying 10 of 552 results for "Ian M Hamilton" clear search

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