I am an aspiring theoretical ecologist in both the Environmental Studies and Interdisciplinary Quantitative Biology programs working on theory and algorithms to infer causality in dynamic ecosystems from observational data. What does that actually mean? Well, I spend my time buried in equations and code, trying to improve the ways ecologists answer questions like 鈥淲hat role does the structure of a food web play in its stability and persistence?鈥, 鈥淲hat structures of competitive interactions best support restoration efforts?鈥, 鈥淚n what ways can we infer dynamics of an unknown community from a heavily studied one?鈥, 鈥淲hat is the impact of species aggregation on predictions of community stability?鈥, 鈥淒o communities develop in predictable ways with regard to the way they are structured?鈥, and most importantly, 鈥淲hat are ecological interactions, and how can we realistically and usefully describe them?鈥. Answering these questions would not be possible without the collaborations and methodological exposure I have found in the IQ Biology program.
Ryan participated in the IQ Biology Program beginning in fall 2012 and was officially accepted in fall 2013. Ryan received a BA in Biology and a minor in Mathematics from Bates College. Ryan completed his lab rotations with Dr. David Bortz in Applied Mathematics, Dr. Michael Hannigan in Mechanical Engineering and Dr. Debra Goldberg in Computer Science and Engineering. Ryan completed his degree in Environmental Studies and his doctoral research in Dan Doak's lab. Ryan graduated in Spring 2018.
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