Who is Cesar Hidalgo? To tell you frankly, we do not have
even any idea regarding Cesar Hidalgo. But after typing the twelve letters on
the search engine Google, we were amazed by what we learned. So, if you also
want to learn more about this remarkable person, continue readingJ. We strongly suggest that you try to
check the works of Cesar Hidalgo.
The Man behind the Complexity, Evolution and Network Science
Cesar
Hidalgo was born in Santiago de Chile, on the 22nd day of December
in the year 1979. He entered the Physics program at the Pontificia Universidad
Catόlica de Chile starting 1998 and graduating in 2003, under the advisory of
Francis Claro, PhD. On August 2004, he entered the Physics PhD Program at the
University of Notre Dame and joined the Center for Complex Network Research
(CCNR) directed by Laszlo Barabasi. As a member of CCNR and a Notre Dame grad
student, he worked at the Center for Cancer Systems Biology at Dana Farber
Cancer Institute from Harvard University, between September 2005 and July 2006.
On the fall of 2007, the CCNR moved to Northeastern University, yet he remained
a Notre Dame student and he finished working on his dissertation from Boston.
He defended his dissertation at Notre Dame on July 2008, with Laszlo Barabasi
being his PhD thesis advisor. In September 2008, he joined the Center for
International Development at Harvard University as a research fellow. In September
2009, he was appointed Adjunct Lecturer in Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy
School. In August 2010, he joined the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Media Laboratory as an Assistant Professor in Media Arts and Science.
Hidalgo’s
work focuses on improving the understanding of systems by using and developing
concepts of complexity, evolution, and network science; his goal is to improve
understanding of the evolution of prosperity in order to help develop
industrial policies that can help countries raise the living standards of their
citizens. His areas of application include economic development, systems
biology, and social systems. Hidalgo is also a graphic art enthusiast and has
published and exhibited artwork that uses data collected originally for scientific
purposes.
And in the
field of research, this man has done some fascinating stuff which others may
consider impossible. Thanks to him and his colleagues, we are able to see the
global economy and mobility of networks by applying the science of networks. By
looking at Hidalgo’s work, you will notice the incorporation of art to every
network. His works encompasses the boundary between art and science; it is
indeed a combination of the two.
Try to look
at the image below, what is your initial description of it?
Is it an
art? Is it a graphical illustration?
The answer
is both. Probably, most people who will see the diagram above will say that it
is an excellent work of art. Indeed, it is an art that is worth a thousand
words. Technically, it really is. But only few people will notice that it is
not only an image made by imagination but also an image crafted through long
periods of scientific studies. This art
can be of great help in solving our present economic problems.
Cesar Hidalgo is recently focusing on development
economics. He argues that the best predictor of an economic future is
the diversity of its production capacity rather than its magnitude. And an
economy which uses more inputs in their production adapts better to any changes
in the world economy. And by using his mathematical tools, Hidalgo concluded
that products which use a lot of inputs are scarcer than those which do not. He
is also able to quantitatively assess the diversity of a country’s input by
analyzing the economy’s products and the number of other economies capable of
producing the same products.
In every work of this exceptional man,
science, mathematics, and visual arts are embraced effectively especially in
studying the complexity of our economies and other various issues. He has shown
the ability of man to incorporate his ideas and perceptions of the world in
calculative and beautiful ways.
0 comments:
Post a Comment