Page - 31 - in options, Volume winter 2015/2016
Image of the Page - 31 -
Text of the Page - 31 -
interview
31winter
2015/2016 +
optionswww.iiasa.ac.at
people at iiasa
From insect swarms
to banking crises—making
connections across networks
Q & A with IIASA Postdoctoral Research Scholar
Matthias Wildemeersch
QQ How would you describe systems analysis?
QA We look at the whole system, we never focus on a single, isolated component.
So, for example, in an ecological setting we wouldn’t look at a single species and
its population fluctuations, we would try to look at all species in the ecosystem
and how they affect each other. Another example would be financial networks,
we would not examine the success or failure of a single bank, we would want
to study the system as a whole. The bottom line is that we always look at
connections between components in a system.
QQ How did you become interested in this type of research?
QA The common factor running through all my work has been networks.
For my PhD IÂ
researched how wireless communication networks can be designed
so that they are more energy-efficient. As I worked I began to see that networks
of all different kinds have common qualities.
For example, the initial proposal I sent to IIASA when applying for my post-doc was
actually about opinion dynamics. I was interested in phenomena like the ArabÂ
spring of
2011 where social networks were used to spread opinions in a very short amount ofÂ
time.
But in fact the framework we created is not limited to this specific circumstance,
it describes network behavior in general, and can be applied more widely.
QQ Does your work have practical applications for policy design?
QA
We are often most interested in how the structure of a network affects its stability;
this can have important applications. For example, when Lehman Brothers failed in
2008 other institutions with financial links to the company also started to get into
trouble. There was a cascade of failures. The question is, can we design a financial
network in a different way, so that the loss of one of these institutions does not result
in such a cascade? Research like that could help to create a regulatory framework
that would prohibit certain unstable network structures, ensuring resilience.
Currently, I am working on a very applied problem. We have been examining
insectÂ
outbreaks, known to us as critical transitions. Certain conditions—for example,
rising temperatures or increased rainfall as a result of climate change—can result
in critical transitions in the ecosystem; from stable, low numbers of an insect,
to a very high density that stays that way for a long time. I am working with
colleagues in the Ecosystems Services and Management Program, using data
on moths in Scandinavian forests to model and predict these critical transitions.
This information could then be used to inform forest management.
QQ What do you enjoy about working at IIASA?
QA IIASA is a very fertile working environment. There are so many different subjects
being studied here but everyone is looking at them from a systems perspective.
I am interested in all kinds of problems, ecological, social, it doesn’t matter.
Here you can broaden your scope and apply your specific background to
problems which affect everybody. That is very satisfying and motivational. DB Matthias Wildemeersch
is a Postdoctoral Research Scholar
working jointly in the Advanced
Systems Analysis and Ecosystems
Services and Management Programs
at IIASA. His research focuses on
network dynamics and stability
and can be applied across
diverse disciplines.
Further info Read more about Wildemeersch’s
research at blog.iiasa.ac.at/viralmarketing-15
Matthias Wildemeersch wildemee@iiasa.ac.at
back to the
book options, Volume winter 2015/2016"
options
Volume winter 2015/2016
- Title
- options
- Volume
- winter 2015/2016
- Location
- Laxenburg
- Date
- 2015
- Language
- English
- License
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 32
- Categories
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine