Santa Fe Institute Collaboration Platform

COMPLEX TIME: Adaptation, Aging, & Arrow of Time

Get Involved!
Contact: Caitlin Lorraine McShea, Program Manager, cmcshea@santafe.edu

Difference between revisions of "User:ChrisKempes"

From Complex Time
 
Line 4: Line 4:
 
|Affiliation=SFI
 
|Affiliation=SFI
 
|Email address=ckempes@santafe.edu
 
|Email address=ckempes@santafe.edu
|Biography=<meta charset="utf-8"><span>Chris Kempes is a scientist working at the intersection of physics, biology, and the earth sciences. Using mathematical and computational techniques he studies how simple theoretical principles inform a variety of phenomena ranging from major evolutionary life-history transitions, to the biogeography of plant traits, to the organization of bacterial communities. He is particularly interested in biological architecture as a mediator between physiology and the local environment.<span></span></span>
+
|Biography=<span>Chris Kempes is a scientist working at the intersection of physics, biology, and the earth sciences. Using mathematical and computational techniques he studies how simple theoretical principles inform a variety of phenomena ranging from major evolutionary life-history transitions, to the biogeography of plant traits, to the organization of bacterial communities. He is particularly interested in biological architecture as a mediator between physiology and the local environment.<span></span></span>
 
|Related links={{Related link
 
|Related links={{Related link
 
|Related link title=SFI Profile
 
|Related link title=SFI Profile

Latest revision as of 16:08, August 16, 2018

Chris Kempes.jpeg

Name
Chris Kempes
Affiliation
SFI
Email address
ckempes@santafe.edu

Biography

Chris Kempes is a scientist working at the intersection of physics, biology, and the earth sciences. Using mathematical and computational techniques he studies how simple theoretical principles inform a variety of phenomena ranging from major evolutionary life-history transitions, to the biogeography of plant traits, to the organization of bacterial communities. He is particularly interested in biological architecture as a mediator between physiology and the local environment.

Related links

Involvement in the Complex Time Research Theme

Organizer

This user is listed as an organizer for the following meetings:

  1. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life

Presenter

This user is listed as a presenter for the following agenda items:

  1. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/Systematic Physiology and Aging Across Diverse Organisms
  2. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Co-evolution of population and environment - ecological & metabolic dynamics
  3. Toward a Multi-Scale Theory of Birth and Death Patterns II/Ontogenetic consideration and discussion
  4. Towards a Multi-Scale Theory of Birth and Death Pattern II/Ontological Considerations

Attendee

This user is listed as an attendee for the following meetings:

  1. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases
  2. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases II
  3. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics
  4. Toward a multi-scale theory of birth and death pattern
  5. Towards a Multi-Scale Theory of Birth and Death Pattern II