Robert Gooding-Townsend

Robert Gooding-Townsend is a master’s student in
mathematical biology working under the supervision of Chris Bauch and Madhur Anand. Prior to his graduate work, he completed concurrent Bachelors’ of Knowledge Integration and Applied Mathematics at the University of Waterloo. His primary research area is
forest dynamics and models of land cover change. Current models of the forest transition – in which countries move from net deforestation to net forest cover gain – focus on economic factors. However, forests also have ecological feedback mechanisms, which
have had a lesser role in existing models. Incorporating these feedbacks into models of land cover change shows that there may be unforeseen threshold effects in this complex system.

Previous research interests include synthetic biology, models of the dynamics of scientific communities, and investigations
into the practice of interdisciplinarity. His interest in the role of science in society extends beyond academics as well. He is the Science in Society editor for the blogging platform Science Borealis, a runner-up of the Canadian Science Policy Conference’s Youth Policy Award, and an amateur science comedian.

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Featured

Blake LeBaron's WICI Talk. Jan. 24, 2017

WICI Occasional Paper

Exergonic Innovations: The History of Britain’s Coal Exploitation
By Clayton J. M. Dasilva

This essay investigates the technological relationship between humanity and its environment, using the Industrial Revolution in Britain as a case study of exergonic innovation, where the invention of the Newcomen steam engine transformed Britain’s conception of coal and its potential, as well as that of British society.

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