Neil F. Johnson
homepage:http://www.physics.ox.ac.uk/CM/people/JohnsonN.htm
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Description

Neil heads up the Condensed Matter Theory Group in the Clarendon Laboratory. He did his BA at Cambridge University (St John's College) and PhD at Harvard University as a Kennedy Scholar. He was then made a Research Fellow at St. John's College, Cambridge University, and a Professor in Physics at the Universidad de Los Andes (Bogota). He came to Oxford in 1992. See http:www.lincoln.ox.ac.uk/fellows/johnson/

Neil presented the Royal Institution Christmas Lectures ‘Arrows of Time’ on BBC TV in 1999. His group's research focuses on complex systems, both in the classical and quantum regimes, and in application domains as far apart as biology, medicine, finance, and sociology. See ‘Financial Market Complexity’ (Oxford University Press, 2003)

http:www.oup.co.uk/isbn/0-19-852665-2

Also see his new popular science book on Complexity, 'Two's Company, Three is Complexity' (Oneworld Publishing, 2007) which gives an overview of this inter-disciplinary work.

He is the Series Editor for Complex Systems and Inter-disciplinary Science by World Scientific Press. He has also been an Editor of International Journal of Theoretical and Applied Finance. Neil is a director of Oxford University's computational centre for the study of financial markets as complex systems.


Lectures:

lecture
flag Complexity in Human Activity: Conflicts, Currencies and Crimes
as author at  4th European Conference on Complex Systems,
9106 views
  invited talk
flag Brains not Bullets? From Terrorism, Insurgencies and Drug Wars, to Street Gangs and World of Warcraft
as author at  International Workshop on Coping with Crises in Complex Socio-Economic Systems,
6126 views
lecture
flag Interview with Neil F. Johnson
as author at  4th European Conference on Complex Systems,
6665 views
  lecture
flag The dangers of time-aggregation: A little knowledge is a dangerous thing: and sampling in social systems
as author at  International Workshop on Challenges and Visions in the Social Sciences,
3778 views