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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?
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.
I was fascinated by the physical processes that underlie information processing, so studied physics and computerscience initially. My PhD in computational and neural systems was a formational time. I experienced collaborations between biology, engineering and socialsciences with a playful attitude.
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