Discover this podcast and so much more

Podcasts are free to enjoy without a subscription. We also offer ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more for just $11.99/month.

Laura Alessandretti - The Deep Power of Programming

Laura Alessandretti - The Deep Power of Programming

FromToo Lazy to Read the Paper


Laura Alessandretti - The Deep Power of Programming

FromToo Lazy to Read the Paper

ratings:
Length:
111 minutes
Released:
Aug 30, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Today on the Pod we are lucky to have Laura Alessandretti (1) visiting us.Laura is an Assistant Professor in Modelling of Human Dynamics at the Technical University of Denmark. She is interested in Computational Social Science, Data Science and Complex Networks. She studies aspects of human behavior combining analysis of large-scale datasets, analytical models and numerical simulations. Previously, she was a PostDoctoral researcher at the Copenhagen Centre for Social Data Science and at DTU Compute. Before that, Laura got her PhD in Mathematics at City, University of London, and her Master's in Physics of Complex Systems at École normale supérieure de Lyon. She’s also doing many things to serve the scientific community, for example Laura will be the general chair (with Luca Aiello) of the IC2S2 conference in Copenhagen.Laura is a close collaborator and a good friend of mine, so today’s podcast is a little bit different than many others. We discuss the long and winding road leading to our joint paper “The Scales of Human Mobility” (2).The sound is a little less perfect than sometimes, but the content is top-notch, so I hope you’ll stick with it in spite of that.References(1) https://laura.alessandretti.com(2) https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-020-2909-1
Released:
Aug 30, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (20)

In this podcast the author explains a paper to me, your host, Professor Sune Lehmann (https://sunelehmann.com). The participants are authors of a paper in network science or data science. Sometimes I feature a group of co-authors! The intended audience is PhD students, PostDocs and other scientists. The idea is to start with a bit about the paper's author, the idea for the paper. Then talk about the research itself. And we’ll end by gossiping about the reviewing process, etc. The whole thing is based on the idea that papers are so formal. And that when two people talk to each other informally, it’s often more fun – and tends to get ideas across more effectively.