Manfred Laubichler
· Director and President's ProfessorVerifiedArizona State University · School of Complex Adaptive Systems
Active 1998–2026
About
Manfred Laubichler is a Global Futures Professor and President's Professor of Theoretical Biology and History of Biology at Arizona State University. He serves as the director of the School of Complex Adaptive Systems and the Decision Theater. His research focuses on evolutionary novelties from genomes to knowledge systems, the structure of evolutionary theory, and the evolution of knowledge. Laubichler's academic background includes undergraduate training in zoology, philosophy, and mathematics at the University of Vienna, and graduate training in biology at Yale University and in History/History of Science at Princeton University. He is an external professor at the Santa Fe Institute, a visiting scholar at the Max Planck Institute for Geoanthropology in Jena, Germany, and an external faculty member at the Complexity Science Hub Vienna. Laubichler is also an elected fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a former fellow of the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin, and Vice Chair of the Global Climate Forum.
Research topics
- Political Science
- Sociology
- Computer Science
- Engineering ethics
- Medicine
- Virology
- Knowledge management
- Gerontology
- Psychiatry
- Engineering
- Law
- Family medicine
- Public relations
- Pedagogy
Selected publications
Journal of Global Health · 2026-05-15
articleOpen accessBackground: Long COVID has disproportionately affected Hispanic/Latino communities, particularly in Arizona. Structural inequities contribute to disparities, but limited culturally tailored health information remains an underexplored barrier to effective communication. This study evaluated the impact of culturally designed Long COVID educational videos for Hispanic/Latino audiences. Methods: We developed animated videos incorporating cultural symbols and diversity cues. Participants completed pre- and post-intervention surveys assessing Long COVID knowledge. Pre-post regression analyses examined knowledge gains, subgroup differences (education, gender, lived experience), and the influence of cultural design elements. Results: Baseline knowledge was higher among participants with greater educational attainment; however, post-intervention knowledge levels were similar across education groups. Female participants demonstrated lower scores than males, diverging from typical health information-seeking trends. Participants with lived experience of Long COVID reported higher baseline knowledge. Cultural design features, including symbolism and perceived diversity, showed modest effects, particularly among younger viewers. Overall, knowledge increased significantly following video exposure across all subgroups. Conclusions: Culturally tailored Long COVID videos effectively enhanced knowledge among Hispanic/Latino audiences, mitigating educational disparities and engaging individuals with diverse experiences. While cultural design elements had limited influence, they may enhance relevance for specific subgroups. These findings support the potential of culturally responsive video interventions to improve health education access in underserved communities and highlight areas for refinement in future multimedia health communication strategies.
Royal Society Open Science · 2026-01-14
articleOpen accessSenior authorAbstract A complete explanation of evolutionary change requires reconciling processes that operate across multiple levels of spatial/temporal organization. Development, the processes by which traits are generated, unfolds over an individual’s lifetime; heredity, encompassing the diverse forms of information transmission, occurs across generations; and population and ecological change often take place across longer horizons. Capturing these layered dynamics in a formal mathematical framework is essential for advancing evolutionary theory in line with recent conceptual developments, such as extended evolutionary theory (EET) or the extended evolutionary synthesis (EES). In this work, we introduce the extended life cycle (ELC), a multilevel–multiscale mathematical modelling framework that centres the life cycle as the fundamental unit of evolutionary analysis. In contrast to traditional gene-centric approaches, the ELC formalism captures the multilevel causal architecture of biological systems by modelling development, heredity, population and ecological dynamics across distinct, but interacting ontological levels. Each level is expressed as a stochastic state-space model, with multiple scales within each level. We demonstrate the utility of the ELC through a Bayesian learning application to multiscale habitat selection and show how our framework can predict latent trajectories generated from complex multilayered dynamics.
Decision Theaters and Democracy
Risk, governance and society · 2025-01-01
book-chapterSenior authorSynthesis of innovation and obsolescence
ArXiv.org · 2025-05-08
preprintOpen accessInnovation and obsolescence describe the dynamics of ever-churning social and biological systems, from the development of economic markets to scientific and technological progress to biological evolution. They have been widely discussed, but in isolation, leading to fragmented modeling of their dynamics. This poses a problem for connecting and building on what we know about their shared mechanisms. Here we collectively propose a conceptual and mathematical framework to transcend field boundaries and to explore unifying theoretical frameworks and open challenges. We ring an optimistic note for weaving together disparate threads with key ideas from the wide and largely disconnected literature by focusing on the duality of innovation and obsolescence and by proposing a mathematical framework to unify the metaphors between constitutive elements.
Time series forecasting of Valley fever infection in Maricopa County, AZ using LSTM
The Lancet Regional Health - Americas · 2025-02-05 · 13 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorBackground: Coccidioidomycosis (CM), also known as Valley fever, is a respiratory infection. Recently, the number of confirmed cases of CM has been increasing. Precisely defining the influential factors and forecasting future infection can assist in public health messaging and treatment decisions. Methods: concentration, drought, and stringency index, were included in LSTM networks, considering their association with CM prevalence, time-lag effect, and correlation with other factors. Findings: LSTM can predict CM prevalence with accurate trend and low mean squared error (MSE). We also found a tradeoff between the length of the forecasting period and the performance of the forecasting model. The models with longer forecasting periods have less accurate trends over time and higher MSEs. Two models with different lengths of forecasting periods, 10 days and 30 days, are identified with good prediction. Interpretation: LSTM algorithms, combined with traditional statistical methods, could help with the forecasting of CM cases. By predicting the CM prevalence, our results can inform researchers, epidemiologists, clinicians, and the public in order to assist public health. Funding: "Getting to the Source of Arizona's Valley Fever Problem: A Tri-University Collaboration to Map and Characterize the Pathogen Where It Grows" funded by the Arizona Board of Regents.
The Extended Life Cycle: A Multiscale Modeling Framework for Extended Evolutionary Dynamics
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2025-05-19
preprintOpen accessSenior authorAbstract A complete explanation of evolutionary change requires reconciling processes that operate across multiple time scales. Development, the processes by which traits are generated, unfolds over an individual’s lifetime; heredity, encompassing the diverse forms of information transmission, occurs across generations; and population and ecological change often take place over even longer temporal horizons. Capturing these layered dynamics in a formal mathematical framework is essential for advancing evolutionary theory in line with recent conceptual developments, such as Extended Evolutionary Theory (EET) or the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis (EES). In this work, we introduce the Extended Life Cycle (ELC), a multiscale mathematical modeling framework that centers the life cycle as the fundamental unit of evolutionary analysis. In contrast to traditional gene-centric approaches, the ELC formalism captures the nested temporal structure and multilevel causal architecture of biological systems by modeling development, heredity, population, and ecological dynamics across distinct but interacting timescales. Each layer is expressed as a stochastic state-space model, enabling feedback across levels and accommodating diverse interaction topologies and inheritance systems. We demonstrate the utility of the ELC through a Bayesian simulation to estimate latent dynamics across three time scales. By formalizing the life cycle as a dynamic scaffold, the ELC offers a flexible foundation for modeling evolution in complex systems.
Nature Cities · 2025-03-04
articleOpen accessAbstract Rapid urbanization and rising inequality are pressing global concerns, yet inequality is an ancient trait of city life that may be intrinsically connected to urbanism itself. Here we investigate how elite wealth scales with urban population size across culture and time by analyzing ancient Roman and modern cities. Using Bayesian models to address archeological uncertainties, we uncovered a consistent correlation between population size and physical expressions of elite wealth in urban spaces. These patterns suggest the presence of an ancient, enduring mechanism underlying urban inequality. Supported by an agent-based network simulation and informed by the settlement scaling theory, we propose that the observed patterns arise from common preferential attachment in social networks—a simple, yet powerful, driver of unequal access to interaction potential. Our findings open up new directions in urban scaling research and underscore the importance of understanding long-term urban dynamics to chart a course toward a fairer urban future.
GAIA - Ecological Perspectives for Science and Society · 2025-10-16
articleOpen accessDemocratic systems are often seen as resilient, yet today they reach their limits: polarization, loss of trust, and digital discourses undermine their capacity to act. In this article, we explore how structural contradictions and communicative double binds challenge democratic practice ‐ and ask which new forms of participation are needed to secure future viability.
Debates in the digital humanities · 2024-06-20 · 2 citations
bookBringing together leading experts from across North America and Europe, _Computational Humanities_ redirects debates around computation and humanities digital scholarship from dualistic arguments to nuanced discourse centered around theories of knowledge and power. This volume is organized around four questions: Why or why not pursue computational humanities? How do we engage in computational humanities? What can we study using these methods? Who are the stakeholders? <br><br> Recent advances in technologies for image and sound processing have expanded computational approaches to cultural forms beyond text, and new forms of data, from listservs and code repositories to tweets and other social media content, have enlivened debates about what counts as digital humanities scholarship. Providing case studies of collaborations between humanities-centered and computation-centered researchers, this volume highlights both opportunities and frictions, showing that data and computation are as much about power, prestige, and precarity as they are about _p_\-values.
Using urban pasts to speak to urban presents in the Anthropocene
Nature Cities · 2024-01-11 · 23 citations
articleOpen accessWith more people now living in urban areas than outside of them, urbanism is becoming an increasingly important socioeconomic and ecological arena for our species in the twenty-first century. Understanding historical and regional variation in urban trajectories and land use has the potential to provide long-term perspectives on pressing contemporary challenges. Here we review how novel methods and approaches are enabling archeology to shed new light on the past 5,500 years of urban life. From exploring urban variability in ‘extreme’ environments to studying the interaction of urbanism and the Earth system, we argue that the past provides a critical, growing reservoir of knowledge for contemporary urban scientists and planners. Humanity is increasingly urban, but urban living is not new, and past examples showcase striking variation. This Review synthesizes methodological and other advances in archeology to illustrate how compellingly the past can inform current urban science and understanding.
Recent grants
CAREER: Twentieth Century Theories of Development in Context
NSF · $401k · 2007–2013
NSF · $399k · 2017–2023
Professional Dev Fellowship: Using informatics to advance history and philosophy of science research
NSF · $84k · 2009–2012
Frequent coauthors
- 69 shared
Eva Schernhammer
Harvard University
- 45 shared
Peter F. Stadler
Leipzig University
- 40 shared
Guido Caniglia
Konrad Lorenz Institute for Evolution and Cognition Research
- 40 shared
Jane Maienschein
Arizona State University
- 40 shared
Gerald Steiner
Universität für Weiterbildung Krems
- 37 shared
Brenda M. Birmann
Brigham and Women's Hospital
- 32 shared
Martin Bertau
TU Bergakademie Freiberg
- 28 shared
Jakob Weitzer
Medical University of Vienna
Education
- 1998
M.A.
Princeton University
- 1997
Ph.D.
Yale University
- 1993
Other
Yale University
- 1991
M.S., Zoology
University of Vienna
Awards & honors
- Elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advanceme…
- Resume-aware match score
- Save to shortlist
- AI-drafted outreach
See your match with Manfred Laubichler
PhdFit ranks faculty by your research interests, methods, and publications — grounded in their actual work, not templates.
- Free to start
- No credit card
- 30-second signup