My profile

Biography

My general scientific aim is to understand the role of information-processing and computation in complex systems.

My research is interdisciplinary and collaborative.

I use mathematical, computational and experimental approaches combining biologically-inspired computing, synthetic / systems biology and game theory.

Applications of my research range from the computational study of cooperation and cheating in communities to the spreading of cancer in tissues.

Academic and professional qualifications

PhD in Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence, University of Seville (Spain)

Career History

Research Associate at the University of Edinburgh, UK

Researcher at the Spanish National Biotechnology Centre - Spanish National Research Council, Madrid, Spain

Microsoft Research - University of Trento, Centre for Computational and Systems Biology, Trento, Italy

Languages

english; italian; spanish

Prizes and awards

Member of the Editorial Board of “Mathematics” (MDPI)

Member of the Editorial Board of “SynBio” (MDPI)

Steering Committee Member of the Conference on Membrane Computing

Academy New Appointments Grant (British Computer Society). 

Microsoft Artificial Intelligence for Earth Grant

Invited Participant, National Academies Kecks Future Initiatives (NAKFI) Conference on Collective Behavior

National Academies Keck Future Initiatives Grant

Personal website address

https://sites.google.com/site/bio0homenaco/

Interests and expertise

Study of Complex Systems; Theory of Computing; Synthetic and Systems Biology; Bio-Inspired Computing; Evolutionary Game Theory. 

Teaching

Subject areas

Theory and Applications of Computing; Algorithms

Why study…

Research:

I study the role of information-processing in living systems. In particular, I investigate the way in which living systems process and manipulate information and how their ability to do that in an efficient way can affect their possibility to compete and cooperate. 

This line of research can increase our understanding of the meaning of “computation” and can allow us to use inspiration from living systems to get more reliable and more efficient computational systems.

Moreover, it allows us to understand Nature in a computational way providing new opportunities to tackle social and biological issues.

Postgraduate teaching

Algorithms and Data Structures

Research outputs

Research expertise

Study of Complex Systems; Theory of Computing; Synthetic and Systems Biology; Bio-Inspired Computing; Evolutionary Game Theory.