Gyorgy Korniss
Professor
Physics, Applied Physics, and Astronomy
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
United States of America
Biography
Prof. Gyorgy Korniss received his Diploma (M.S.) in Physics at Eotvos University, Budapest in 1993 and his Ph.D. in Physics at Virginia Tech in 1997. His research background is statistical physics and interacting and agent-based systems. He was a postdoctoral research associate at the Supercomputer Computations Research Institute, Florida State University between 1997-2000. He has been in the Department Physics at RPI since 2000, where he has been a Professor since 2012. He authored and co-authored over 80 mostly interdisciplinary publications, including papers in Science, Physical Review Letters, Journal of Theoretical Biology, Scientific Reports, and Chaos. He is an Editorial Board member of Fluctuation and Noise Letters, Scientific Reports, and Computational Social Networks. His current research focuses on transport, flow, and cascading failures in complex networks; synchronization, coordination, and extreme events in coupled stochastic systems; and opinion dynamics and influencing in social networks.
Research Interest
Complex systems: structure and dynamics of social, information, and infrastructure networks, Social dynamics, opinion spreading
Publications
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A. Asztalos, S. Sreenivasan, B.K. Szymanski, G. Korniss, "Cascading failures in spatially-embedded random networksâ€, PLoS One 9(1): e84563 (2014).
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F. Molnár Jr., N. Derzsy, B.K. Szymanski, and G. Korniss, "Building Damage-Resilient Dominating Sets in Complex Networks against Random and Targeted Attacksâ€, Scientific Reports 5, 8321 (2015)