After my Ph.D. in Business Economics from University of Michigan, I stayed to pursue an M.A. in Mathematics, subsequently a Ph.D.--ABD in Applied Mathematics at Brown. My research interest is laws independent of reference frames. Subordinate to this
...More
After my Ph.D. in Business Economics from University of Michigan, I stayed to pursue an M.A. in Mathematics, subsequently a Ph.D.--ABD in Applied Mathematics at Brown. My research interest is laws independent of reference frames. Subordinate to this idea is scale invariance, for which I generalized elasticity in economics to "relative derivative," (dy/dx)(a/b), and extended comparative statics to quantitative analyses via percentage changes. My presentation at the Moscow Conference (2012) was an application of relative derivatives to the global economy with eight equations originating from my paper under Professor Paul McCracken during my Ph.D. study at Ann Arbor. I am also indebted to Professor Wolfgang Haken, who taught me advanced calculus during my earlier MBA study in University of Illinois, inspiring me to pursue mathematics. Three recent publications of mine were: [1] “Relative Derivative and Proportionality in Differential Geometry,” International Journal of Contemporary Mathematical Sciences, V3 (1), 1-16, 2008, http://www.m-hikari.com/ijcms-password2008/1-4-2008/lightIJCMS1-4-2008.pdf, [2] “General Relativity Extended,” in Electromagnetic Waves Propagation in Complex Matter (Ch. 6), InTech, 2011, http://www.intechopen.com/books/electromagnetic-waves-propagation-in-complex-matter/general-relativity-extended, and [3] “The Spinning Motions of All Fermions and Bosons as Implied by Pauli Matrices Containing Complex Conjugates in a Combined Spacetime Four-Manifold,” Applied Physics Research, V5 (4), 37-45, 2013, http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/apr.v5n4p37.
Less