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Strogatz's writing for the general public includes four books and frequent newspaper articles. His book Sync [23] was chosen as a Best Book of 2003 by Discover Magazine. [24] His 2009 book The Calculus of Friendship [25] was called "a genuine tearjerker" [26] and "part biography, part autobiography and part off-the-beaten-path guide to calculus."
The Watts–Strogatz model is a random graph generation model that produces graphs with small-world properties, including short average path lengths and high clustering. It was proposed by Duncan J. Watts and Steven Strogatz in their article published in 1998 in the Nature scientific journal. [ 1 ]
Steven Strogatz (born 1959), nonlinear systems and applied mathematics [6] Daniel Stroock (born 1940), probability theory [6] Eduard Study (1862–1930), invariant theory and geometry [118]: 88 Bella Subbotovskaya (1938–1982), mathematician and founder of the Jewish People's University [483] Benny Sudakov (born 1969), combinatorics [9]
A description of heterogeneous social networks still remains an open question. Though much research was not done for a number of years, in 1998 Duncan Watts and Steven Strogatz published a breakthrough paper in the journal Nature. Mark Buchanan said, "Their paper touched off a storm of further work across many fields of science" (Nexus, p60, 2002).
Numberphile is an educational YouTube channel featuring videos that explore topics from a variety of fields of mathematics. [2] [3] In the early days of the channel, each video focused on a specific number, but the channel has since expanded its scope, [4] featuring videos on more advanced mathematical concepts such as Fermat's Last Theorem, the Riemann hypothesis [5] and Kruskal's tree ...
Steven Strogatz as himself; Eugenia Cheng as herself; Rebecca Newberger Goldstein as herself; Delilah Gates as herself; Anthony Aguirre as himself; Moon Duchin as herself; Carlo Rovelli as himself; Kenny Easwaran as himself; Janna Levin as herself; Sasha Wong Halperin as voice of the Numbers
The 2021–22 Distinguished Chair for the Public Dissemination of Mathematics was Steven Strogatz, Cornell University Professor of Applied Mathematics, an award-winning mathematician, author and broadcaster. [27]
The existence of ripple solutions was predicted (but not observed) by Wiley, Strogatz and Girvan, [20] who called them multi-twisted q-states. The topology on which the Kuramoto model is studied can be made adaptive [21] by use of fitness model showing enhancement of synchronization and percolation in a self-organised way.