6 results match your criteria: "UK [2] Santa Fe Institute[Affiliation]"

Scaling and universality in urban economic diversification.

J R Soc Interface

January 2016

Institute for New Economic Thinking, University of Oxford, Oxford OX2 6ED, UK Santa Fe Institute, 1399 Hyde Park Road, Santa Fe, NM 87501, USA Mathematics Department, Imperial College, London SW7 2AZ, UK.

Understanding cities is central to addressing major global challenges from climate change to economic resilience. Although increasingly perceived as fundamental socio-economic units, the detailed fabric of urban economic activities is only recently accessible to comprehensive analyses with the availability of large datasets. Here, we study abundances of business categories across US metropolitan statistical areas, and provide a framework for measuring the intrinsic diversity of economic activities that transcends scales of the classification scheme.

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Cultural change can be quantified by temporal changes in frequency of different cultural artefacts and it is a central question to identify what underlying cultural transmission processes could have caused the observed frequency changes. Observed changes, however, often describe the dynamics in samples of the population of artefacts, whereas transmission processes act on the whole population. Here we develop a modelling framework aimed at addressing this inference problem.

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Invention has been commonly conceptualized as a search over a space of combinatorial possibilities. Despite the existence of a rich literature, spanning a variety of disciplines, elaborating on the recombinant nature of invention, we lack a formal and quantitative characterization of the combinatorial process underpinning inventive activity. Here, we use US patent records dating from 1790 to 2010 to formally characterize invention as a combinatorial process.

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Constructing cities, deconstructing scaling laws.

J R Soc Interface

January 2015

Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis (CASA), University College London, London, UK.

Cities can be characterized and modelled through different urban measures. Consistency within these observables is crucial in order to advance towards a science of cities. Bettencourt et al.

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