About Murad Qubbaj
Researcher Using Dynamical Models
Drawing on a BS, MS, and PhD in physics, researcher Murad Qubbaj spent three years as a postdoctoral research associate at Arizona State University, where he participated in working on mathematical modeling that studied the effects of scaling on population and resources and on the sustainability of a resource-population network systems. He also participated in creating a model to study the effects of scaling on the dynamics of large city networks.
Additionally, Murad R. Qubbaj participated in the design and construction of a structure-based analysis that addressed how the network of interdependencies among occupational specializations affect how urban economies can transform. He also helped develop a mathematical model to study the adaption of different irrigation technologies in Arizona. He also conducted research on implementing time delay in a mathematical model of social conflict and also using replication dynamics to study regime shits and population splits.
Murad R. Qubbaj also spent 6 years as a graduate research assistant at Florida Atlantic University, where he developed a model that studied the mutual effects of the short-range homogenous connectivity and long-range heterogenous connection on the stability of the one-dimensional neural field. As a graduate research assistant at Eastern Mediterranean University, he studied the relativistic appearance of rapidly moving objects.