Dave Bennett

Professor and Chair, Geographical and Sustainability Sciences
Biography

Professor Bennett's research interests lie at the intersection of technology, policy, and science. While his work is squarely focused on geographic information science (GIScience), he is interested in the processes and the effects of environmental decision-making. Much of his research is done in the context of multidisciplinary teams and designed to understand the social and environmental tradeoffs associated with alternative policies. As he works on these multidisciplinary projects, he is intrigued by the interactions that occur among system components. Such interactions often produce complex, nonlinear responses that would not have been foreseen through the analysis of individual subsystems. As a result, he increasingly frames his work in the context of complexity theory. 

The semi-structured nature of environmental problem solving places unique and challenging demands on GIScience. Recent projects designed to address some of these demands include the use of evolutionary algorithms to generate production possibility frontiers that illustrate tradeoffs among computing criteria and the use of multi-agent based simulation to understand the impact of management decisions on the migratory behavior of elk. This latter project has reignited my interest in the representation of spatial cognition and navigation in the digital domain.

Dave Bennett
Address

306 Jessup Hall
United States