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Professor of Management and Organizations From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dashun Wang is a Professor of Management and Organizations at the Kellogg School of Management and the McCormick School of Engineering, at Northwestern University. In 2019, he became the Founding Director of the Center for Science of Science and Innovation (CSSI).[2] He is also a core faculty member at the Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems (NICO) and an adjunct professor of Department of Physics, at Northeastern University. In 2023, he co-founded the Ryan Institute on Complexity.[3][4][5] Wang is a recipient of the AFOSR Young Investigator award (2016)[6] and was named one of Poets & Quants Best 40 Under 40 Professors (2019).[7]
Dashun Wang | |
---|---|
Alma mater | Northeastern University Fudan University |
Awards | Erdős–Rényi Prize in Network Science[1] |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Physics, Science of Science, Computational Social Science, Network Science, Big Data, Complex Systems |
Institutions | Northwestern University Pennsylvania State University Northeastern University |
Doctoral advisor | Albert-László Barabási |
Website | https://www.dashunwang.com/ |
In 2007, Wang earned an undergraduate degree in Physics from Fudan University, Shanghai, China. He then earned both a M.Sc and a PhD in physics from Northeastern University. From January 2015 to July 2016, he was an assistant professor of College of Information Sciences and Technology at Pennsylvania State University, University Park. He is currently a Professor of Management and Organizations at the Kellogg School of Management and the McCormick School of Engineering, at Northwestern University.[8]
Wang's current research focus is on Science of Science, a quest to turn the scientific methods and curiosities upon ourselves, hoping to use and develop tools from complexity sciences and artificial intelligence to broadly explore the opportunities and promises offered by the recent data explosion in science.[8] His research in this area has received multiple media coverages and has been featured on sources including The New York Times,[9] The Atlantic,[10] etc.
Wang's research also span across the fields of Computational Social Science, Network Science, Big Data, and Complex Systems.[8] His most cited work, titled "Human mobility, social ties, and link prediction", investigates the correlation between mobility patterns and social proximity, and illustrates the power of mobility patterns in predicting formation of new social connections.[11][12] Another representative work of Wang, under the title of "Quantifying long-term scientific impact", centers around citation dynamics of individual papers.[11][13] In collaboration with Chaoming Song and Albert-László Barabási, Wang detects a universal temporal pattern of papers and this observed pattern facilitates a better understanding on the underlying processes of scientific impact and provides a reliable citation-based measure of influence.[13]
Wang's most recent work quantitatively analyzes global policy responses towards the COVID-19 pandemic.[14][15][16]
In 2014, Wang received the Invention Achievement Award from IBM Research. In 2016, Wang was a recipient of the AFOSR Young Investigator award.[6] In 2018, he received an award from the Minerva Research Initiative, a research program sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense.[17][18] In 2019, his paper about the impact of the size of scientific teams was one of Altmetric’s Top 100 most discussed papers across all sciences,[19] and he was named one of Poets & Quants Best 40 Under 40 Professors.[7] In 2021, he was awarded the Erdős–Rényi Prize.[20]