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Brain function - a new indicator of the burden of aging Cognitive function might be a better indicator of aging on an economy, than age-distribution. A new study, lead by Vegard Skirbekk and published in PNAS finds that one standardized indicator of cognitive ability-memory recall is better in countries with higher education & health standards. Countries most burdened by aging may be those where cognitive levels among seniors is poor, not simply those who are chronologically older. YouTube Multimedia Links Available Video presentations of the Wittgenstein Centre Opening Symposium can be found on YouTube. Click more for relevant links.
Publication AWARD: won the WU Best Paper Award 2011 of Category 3 (foreign business communication, law, humanities, sociology, commercial geography, interdisciplinary works). CONGRATULATIONS!
Future trends in global population growth could be significantly affected by improvements in both the quality and quantity of education, particularly female education. Projections of future population trends that do not explicitly include education in their analysis may be flawed, according to research by IIASA’s Wolfgang Lutz and Samir K. C. published today in the journal Science.
News & Highlights of 2010 The European Demographic Data Sheet 2010 and Asian Demographic & Human Capital Data Sheet 2008 are available online (download as PDF). New article in Science
In Memoriam: Nathan Keyfitz 1913 – 2010 Nathan Keyfitz, leader of IIASA's Population Program from 1983 to 1991 and IIASA Deputy Director during 1992, passed away on April 6, 2010, at the age of 96. Keyfitz was one of the giants of demography. He is credited for developing the field of mathematical demography and at IIASA he also pioneered the application of demographic methods to several other fields. Nathan came to IIASA in 1983 from Harvard University, where he was the Andelot Professor of Sociology Emeritus. Previously, he had been a professor at the University of Toronto (1959-1963), the University of Chicago (1963-1968), and the University of California, Berkeley (1968-1972). It was at Chicago that Nathan began to apply mathematical tools and computer technology to the analysis of demographic data. In 1968 he published his groundbreaking Introduction to the Mathematics of Population that described his methodology. At IIASA he increasingly applied these demographic methods to areas outside of demography as he flourished in IIASA’s interdisciplinary atmosphere in areas such as sustainable development and foreign aid. Much of the work IIASA’s Population Program is doing today – from applications of the multi-state model to probabilistic population projections to population-environment analysis – has its roots in Nathan’s creative ideas. After leading IIASA's Population Program, Nathan became an Institute Scholar from 1992 to 1993, and served as IIASA's Deputy Director from April to October 1992, when he led the organization of the major 1992 IIASA conference on the challenges for systems analysis in the nineties and beyond. Nathan also established an association for IIASA alumni, known as the IIASA Society, which today has nearly 900 members. Nathan, who was married to Beatrice (Orkin) Keyfitz from 1939 until her death in October 2009, had two children, Barbara and Robert. We were privileged to have him at IIASA and we will always treasure his memory. He was exceedingly dedicated to IIASA and an incredibly kind and humble person given his seminal contributions to research. A memorial service honoring the life of Nathan Keyfitz will be held at 1 p.m. on April 13 at the Bigelow Chapel in Mount Auburn Cemetery (580 Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge, MA 02138, USA). An online guestbook for personal condolences can be found at Boston.com Wolfgang Lutz, Nebojsa Nakicenovic and Detlof von Winterfeldt News & Highlights of 2009 2009 Mattei Dogan Award to Wolfgang Lutz At the IUSSP's International Population Conference, attended by 2,300 demographers, IIASA's Wolfgang Lutz gave a plenary talk on the role demographers play in understanding population and climate change. The keynote speech marked the presentation of the 2009 Mattei Dogan Award to Lutz who will use the prize to fund the training of a young African demographer at IIASA.
Vegard Skirbekk has been awarded the European Research Council's European Starting Independent Researcher Grant. The five-year study on the demography of skills and beliefs in Europe will look at how factors such as productivity, attitudes, and beliefs will change in Europe in the next 50 years.
News archives (2001-2008) Responsible for this page: Suchitra Subramanian |
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International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
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