President's Report Masthead
December 31, 2015

New center focuses on complex systems

Statistics and calculus help us understand our world in important ways, but scientists need new tools to make sense of increasingly complex and interconnected networks. That was the central theme Oct. 22 as Binghamton celebrated the launch of the Center for Collective Dynamics of Complex Systems.

Increasingly we have global transportation, global communication ... and that means we have things that propagate across the world, Yaneer Bar-Yam, president of the New England Complex Systems Institute, told dozens of faculty, students and administrators who gathered for the event. The study of complex systems can reveal trends, help forecast and avert crises and identify connections between seemingly unrelated phenomena.

The Center for Collective Dynamics of Complex Systems, or CoCo, claims faculty participants from about 15 departments on campus. The researchers study networks ranging from the stock market to the brain, using mathematical modeling to understand and predict their behavior.

If we want to address the most pressing challenges of our society, we need to bring people of different disciplines together, said Donald Nieman, provost and executive vice president for academic affairs.CoCo fits really wonderfully into this paradigm.

Sayama, CoCo director, is an associate professor in Binghamton’s department of systems science and industrial engineering. He’s also the author of a new Open SUNY textbook titled Introduction to the Modeling and Analysis of Complex Systems.

At Binghamton, CoCo, which began as an informal group in 2007, has held a seminar series for years. It was formally recognized as an Organized Research Center in the summer of 2015. For information about the center, go online.