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Cesar Hidalgo
Director, Center for Collective Learning
César A. Hidalgo is a renowned Chilean-Spanish-American scholar recognized for his work in economic complexity, data visualization, and applied artificial intelligence.
He currently leads the Center for Collective Learning at the Artificial and Natural Intelligence Institute (ANITI) of the University of Toulouse, in addition to holding positions as an Honorary Professor at the University of Manchester and a Visiting Professor at Harvard's School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.
Hidalgo previously served as the head of MIT’s Collective Learning group for nearly a decade, progressing from Assistant to Associate Professor during his tenure. Before joining MIT, he was a research fellow at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.
Apart from his academic roles, Hidalgo is a founder of Datawheel, a distinguished company specializing in data distribution and visualization systems. He earned a PhD in Physics from the University of Notre Dame and completed his Bachelor's in Physics at Universidad Católica de Chile.
His significant contributions have been acknowledged with several accolades, including the prestigious Lagrange Prize in 2018 and three Webby Awards. Hidalgo is also an accomplished author with three published books: 'Why Information Grows' (Basic Books, 2015), 'The Atlas of Economic Complexity' (MIT Press, 2014), and 'How Humans Judge Machines' (MIT Press, 2021).
Highlights
We all know Saab’s were born from jets.
But did you know Vespa’s came from helicopters?
This is the amazing story of Vespa and its creator, Corradino D’Ascanio.
A story showing how shocks like the end of WWII, can help us map relationships among industries. /1 🧵 https://t.co/UvEWSvn4rB
After five years in France, I must say that the bit that gives the most information about a French vendor being able to keep an American customer is to respond to emails.
If you are in the service industry in France and you have a customer who is American, just remember to email quickly instead of calling.
The difference in response speed of emails in both countries seems not to be a difference measurable in hours, but in days. And Americans are very used at quick short emails for these type of coordination.