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SpringerOpen SpringerOpen features research a wide variety of peer-reviewed research articles spanning different disciplines including socialsciences, humanities, science, technology, medicine, economics, biomedicine, chemistry, computerscience, psychology, and many more.
Dr Min Xu, a statistician specialising in network analysis at Rutgers University, has developed a probabilistic model that can determine how a network has grown, which not only has applications in epidemiology, but is also useful in socialscience, genetics and counter-terrorism efforts. What is a network? “A
Software engineering, or software development, is the branch of computerscience that involves designing and developing software – the instructions and programs that enable computers to function. The field of software engineering is growing rapidly as computers are becoming integrated into all aspects of our lives.
Let’s look at the main branches: Science in STEM. It includes topics such as chemistry, biology, physics, astronomy, and geology. A student who pursues a science-related career can become a medical professional, meteorologist, agriculturist, zoologist, or biological technician. Engineering in STEM.
But it really wasn’t physics, or computerscience, or math, or biology, or economics, or any known field. But the more important strand has been one that starts to actually take the computational paradigm on board—with the thrust typically being “We can write a program to reproduce what we’re looking at”. What is that science?
Traditional computationalchemistry—perhaps sped up by AI—can potentially determine the rates at which different alkanes are “randomly produced” And in a quite different direction, analyzing the academic literature—say with an LLM—can potentially predict how much a certain alkane can be expected to be studied or talked about.
In 2015 Ed told me a nice story about his time at Caltech: In 1952–53, I was a student in Linus Pauling’s class where he lectured Freshman Chemistry at Caltech. “Lick” Licklider —who persuaded Ed to join BBN to “teach them about computers”. Nowadays we’d call it the trie (or prefix tree) data structure.
As a result, a new discipline, known as research computing, has emerged to apply computers, not just software, to research including to help scientists capture images, construct models, which are turned into simulations, and analyse results. Research computing is a sub-discipline of computerscience.
As a high school student, Winnie had a passion for both math and the socialsciences. Her teachers pushed her into the “easier” path of socialsciences rather than encourage her interest in STEM subjects. And throughout my sort of high school experience, I’d been, you know, passionate about socialsciences.
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