Albert-Laszlo Barabasi is a pioneer of real-world network theory and author of the bestseller, "Linked: How Everything is Connected to Everything Else and What It Means for Business, Science, and Everyday Life." At 32, he was the youngest professor to be named the Emil T. Hofmann Professor of Physics at the University of Notre Dame and has won numerous awards for his work, including the FEBS Anniversary Prize for Systems Biology and the John von Neumann Medal for outstanding achievements. He currently lives in Boston and is Distinguished Professor and Director of the Center for Network Science at Northeastern University.
"In "Linked," Barabasi showed us how complex networks unfold in
space. In "Bursts," he shows us how they unfold in time. Your life
may look random to you, but everything from your visits to a web
page to your visits to the doctor are predictable, and happen in
bursts."
-Clay Shirky, author of "Here Comes Everybody"
"Barabasi is one of the few people in the world who understand the
deep structure of empirical reality."
-Nassim Nicholas Taleb, author of "The Black Swan"
"Barabsi brings a physicist's penetrating eye to a sweeping range
of human activities, from migration to web browsing, from wars to
billionaires, from illnesses to letter writing, from the Department
of Homeland Security to the Conclave of Cardinals. Barabsi shows
how a pattern of bursts appears in what has long seemed a random
mess. These bursts are both mathematically predictable and
beautiful. What a joy it is to read him. You feel like you have
emerged to see a new vista that, while it had always been there,
you had just never seen."
-Nicholas A. Christakis, M.D., Ph.D., coauthor of "Connected: The
Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our
Lives"
""Bursts" is a rich, rewarding read that illuminates a cutting-edge
topic: the patterns of human mobility in an era of total
surveillance. The narrative structure of Barabsi's provocative book
mimics the very pattern of bursts, as abrupt jumps through the
lives of a post-modern sculptor, a medieval Hungarian
revolutionist, and Albert Einstein eventually converge on a single
theme: that our unthinking behaviors are governed by a deeper
meaning that can only be deciphered through the brave lens of
mathematics."
-Ogi Ogas, Ph.D., and Sai Gaddam, Ph.D., Boston University
"Barbasi, a distinguished scientist of complex networks, bravely
tests his innovative theories on some historic events, including a
sixteenth-century Crusade that went terribly wrong. Whether or not
the concept of "burstiness
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