Albert-László Barabási

Albert-László Barabási (born March 30, 1967) is a Romanian-born Hungarian-American physicist, best known for his discoveries in network science and network medicine.

Albert-László Barabási
Barabási at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting of the New Champions in 2012
Born
Barabási Albert László

(1967-03-30) March 30, 1967
Citizenship
Romanian
Hungarian
American
Alma materUniversity of Bucharest (BS)
Eötvös Loránd University (MS)
Boston University (PhD)
Known forResearch of network science
The concept of scale-free networks
Proposal of Barabási–Albert model
Founder of Network Medicine
Introducing Network controllability
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics, Network Science, Network Medicine
ThesisGrowth and roughening of non-equilibrium interfaces (1994)
Doctoral advisorH. Eugene Stanley
Doctoral students
Websitebarabasilab.com

He is a distinguished university professor and Robert Gray Professor of Network Science at Northeastern University, and holds appointments at the department of medicine, Harvard Medical School and the department of network and data science at Central European University. He is the former Emil T. Hofmann Professor of Physics at the University of Notre Dame and former associate member of the Center of Cancer Systems Biology (CCSB) at the Dana–Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard University.

He discovered in 1999 the concept of scale-free networks and proposed the Barabási–Albert model to explain their widespread emergence in natural, technological and social systems, from the cellular telephone to the World Wide Web or online communities. He is the founding president of the Network Science Society, which sponsors the flagship NetSci Conference series held since 2006.

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