Harvard Scholar | AI | Creative Cognition | Multidisciplinary Research

I uphold the principle that strategic, creative cognition and its conceptual modeling holds the key to devising innovative solutions to our most pressing problems. My research spans a gamut of cultural, linguistic (9+), and academic fields, through which I formulate nuanced theoretical models to address critical challenges. My work concerns the theoretical, practical and formalizable nature of creative cognition which informs my concurrent research in theoretical AI design and development. Merging the foundational strengths of the Humanities, STEM, and the Arts, my work seeks to break new ground in its search for the structures of creative cognition, novel AI architectures, and transdisciplinary research methodologies.

I have also conducted (and continue to conduct) significant research regarding Indigenous Linguistics and how such language systems and their rhetorical effects are shaped by interrelated forms of ongoing Traditional Knowledge. I refer those interested to one of the best essays on the subject written by Rosemarie Kuptana & Suzie Napayok-Short, "Inuit Ilitqusia: Inuit Way of Knowing." Kuptana & Napayok-Short demonstrate that Inuit peoples have developed ways of knowing that anticipate and in many ways complement, supplement, and challenge the most advanced of conceptual models such as the Morphological Analysis of Fritz Zwicky, the transdisciplinary methodologies of Michel Serres and Edgar Morin, and the metacategorical matrices of Aristotle.

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