Jose Ignacio Arroyo Gonzalez
Postdoctoral Fellow · Santa Fe Institute
Research Interests
Complex Systems, Systems Biology, Theoretical Biology, Computational Biology
Biography
I’m a computational systems biologist. My general research experience and interests are to use and develop computational approaches to study biological and social systems, at all levels of organization, from molecules to countries. This includes the development of theories from first principles, for potential applications in bioengineering and forecasting responses to global change, building databases, and making algorithms that could be useful for the scientific community. My philosophy is to work using the perspective of complex systems characterized by strong statistical and mathematical perspectives. I can perform interdisciplinary research independently, but I enjoy working in collaborative groups with experts from different areas, to work on problems that could be explained by common principles, e.g. across levels or organization.
Education
2007-2010 Bachelor of Biological Sciences. Major in Evolutionary Biology. Austral University of Chile, Valdivia, Chile 2014-2016 Master of Biological Sciences. Major in Ecology. P. Catholic University of Chile, Santiago, Chile 2014- 2020 Doctor of Biological Sciences. Major in Ecology. P. Catholic University of Chile, Santiago, Chile
Recent Google Scholar Publications
- Scaling laws for function diversity and specialization across socioeconomic and biological complex systems
- From Cells to Cities: Extending Kleiber’s Law from Biology to Urban Systems
- Modeling the effect of temperature on species coexistence
- Foraging guilds of seabirds
- A database of biological thermal performances
Links
- Google Scholar https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=vbgJPgkAAAAJ
- Scopus https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=None
- Personal Weblink https://sites.google.com/view/jiarroyo/bio