Showing posts with label Blogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blogs. Show all posts

Monday, 21 November 2011

Local Blogs

There are now several excellent blogs somehow to mathematics is carried out by the local population, including a few new ones, so I thought that would be a good idea to mention here these related:

Andrew Gelman of Columbia Statistics Department runs the very active Statistical Modeling, causal inference and Social Science blog, which boasts a wealth of all kinds of different subjects, from technical ones about statistics, to social sciences applications.Emanuel Derman, who began his career as a HEP theorist, was one of the early migrants to the financial industry and now has here teaches at Columbia in the Financial Engineering program, a new blog at Reuters. His last book was the very interesting my life as a Quant, this autumn, he has a new coming out right models worn Badly. Cathy O'Neil, a mathematician who learned here for a while before you change career path, starting with a job at the hedge fund D.E. Shaw, has recently started with the beautiful Mathbabe blog. I think I mentioned this already, but one of my colleagues, Johan de Jong (Cathy's husband) also has a blog, the stacks Project Blog. If your metrics to evaluate blogs like "quality of information is" x "degree of abstraction and technical", are the best blog in the world.

If you have comments on these blogs, I encourage you to post them there rather than here. I would be interested in hearing about any other local mathematics/physics related blogs that I am not aware of.

Update: another local mathematics, physics-related blog has made its debut today, Davide Castelvecchi degrees of freedom. It is part of a network of new blogs today being launched by Scientific American, who is based in New York.