M Z

Martin Zwick


Prof

Systems Science - Liberal Arts & Sciences

Office
SMSU M310K
Phone
(503) 725-4987

Martin Zwick was awarded his Ph.D. in Biophysics at MIT in 1968, and joined the Biophysics Department faculty of the University of Chicago in 1969. Initially working in crystallography and macromolecular structure, his interests shifted to systems theory and methodology, the field now known as the study of chaos, complexity, and complex adaptive systems. Since 1976, he has been teaching and doing research in the Systems Science PhD Program at Portland State University; during 1984-1989, he was director of the program.

His main research areas are information theoretic modeling, machine learning, theoretical biology, game theory, and systems theory and philosophy. Scientifically, his focus is on applying systems theory and methodology to the natural and social sciences, most recently to biomedical data analysis, the evolution of cooperation, and sustainability. Philosophically, his focus is on how systems ideas relate to classical and contemporary philosophy, how they offer a bridge between science and religion, and how they can help us understand and address societal problems.

Zwick Selected Works, in Bepress

The OCCAM reconstructability analysis software can be accessed online on the OCCAM server, or by installing your own copy via the OCCAM open-source project.

Education
  • PhD in Biophysics
    MIT