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Posts by Cesar A. Hidalgo

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We are looking forward to hosting @cesifoti.bsky.social @tse-fr.eu for an @inet-complexity.bsky.social seminar on Wed 11th March at Manor Road Building, to discuss his new book!

2 months ago 4 4 1 0
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A bit late, but I finally have "The Infinity Alphabet… and the Laws of Knowledge" by Cesar A. Hidalgo (@cesifoti.bsky.social) in my hands.
A fascinating journey into knowledge and the principles that govern it.

4 months ago 4 2 0 0
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Just got my hands on the physical copies of this cutie patootie. We will be launching this book in London in about a month.

6 months ago 14 0 0 1
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Languages like Spanish and French distinguish between knowledge and know-how. Maybe our economic debates should, too.

6 months ago 6 1 0 0
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The US-Mexico border is not a dividing line, but a seam connecting thousands of value chains.

Explore what it means to make something in North America at bordervalue.com

7 months ago 1 0 0 0

I would recommend this book to everyone interested in AI. After all, it is about something more general. About the I, no matter if it comes with an A or not. It is about the common problems that lead to the development of that I, and how these are shared by biological and artificial systems. 5 ⭐️!!

7 months ago 0 0 1 0

A truly refreshing read that humbles the field of AI while putting it into a broader perspective.

7 months ago 0 0 1 0

From the basics of sensory input, valence, and motility Bennet takes us into neurochemistry, reinforcement learning, and credit assignment problems, showing that what we consider cutting edge research in machine learning is often something that evolution solved over one hundred million years ago.

7 months ago 1 0 1 0

The book is filled with clever experiments that separate the intelligence of worms, fish, & us, while showing that we still have much in common. When do we start recognizing patterns, & why? Why do the mechanisms that allow us to learn can lead to addiction? Why is imagination a key to intelligence?

7 months ago 1 0 1 0
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Do you ever feel like running away when you are in an uncomfortable situation? Do you like dancing when things go your way? Well, so does this little worm.

7 months ago 3 0 1 0

These innovations start with deciding a direction of motion in a multicellular organism. One of the things I found refreshing, is that Bennet explains these mechanisms using experiments on c. elegans, a microscopic worm with about 300 or neurons, which can be used to understand primitive emotions.

7 months ago 1 0 1 0

In this theory, intelligence emerges in animals because, unlike plants who produce their own food, or fungi who eat what is dead, animals roam the environment searching for something to and eat. Animals grew intelligent because we started in the worse ecological niche & had to innovate to survive.

7 months ago 3 0 1 0

A Brief History of Intelligence assembles the many mechanisms that contribute to intelligence in chronological order. This is not just clever structure. By explaining the problem each mechanism solves you get a deep understanding of why intelligence emerged and how it differs among species.

7 months ago 1 0 1 0
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This is the best book I’ve read this year. It is also an important book. In a world obsessed with AI, Max Bennett approaches intelligence from a key point of view: biology.

7 months ago 10 0 2 0
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The political asymmetry of the fertility crisis.

7 months ago 5 1 0 0

Thanks!

9 months ago 0 0 0 0

This is one of the most fun papers that I have worked in a long time. If you want to geek out with the mathematical foundations of economic complexity theory, please give it a read.

9 months ago 1 0 0 0
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We also used this opportunity to embed this model into a short-run equilibrium framework showing that prices increase concavely with the complexity of a product and that economies should converge to the wages of others with similar levels of complexity.

9 months ago 0 0 1 0

This allows us to easily generate output matrices as large as those observed in the empirical literature and calculate their ECI.

9 months ago 0 0 1 0
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Our main model is a generalization of Kremer’s O-Ring model with factors that can be made specific to each economy and activity. In this model, the output of an economy in an activity is proportional to the probability that it is not missing the factors that the activity requires.

9 months ago 0 0 1 0
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In the product space, the core-periphery structure tells us that capabilities are correlated (e.g. Singapore scores high across all capabilities & Mali scores low). In the case of the research space, the ring structure is given by the fact that each field is only similar to a few other fields.

9 months ago 0 0 1 0
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We also show that our model explains differences in network structure, like those observed between the product space (a network with a core and a periphery) and the research space (which is shaped as a ring).

9 months ago 0 0 1 0

The idea that you can measure the presence of economic factors—no matter how they are defined--is an interesting departure. It provides a basis for the use of complexity measures in development. In the paper, we show this property is robust to noise & applies to other production functions.

9 months ago 0 0 1 0
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In a single-factor model, ECI separates economies that are better or worse endowed with the factor. In a model with many factors, ECI tells us which economies have a higher probability of being endowed with many of them--regardless of what these factors are.

9 months ago 0 0 1 0
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NEW PAPER: The Theory of Economic Complexity

The Economic Complexity Index or ECI is a widely used empirical tool with an unclear theoretical basis. In this paper, we change that by formally deriving ECI for several production functions and showing what it really does. 👇🧵

arxiv.org/html/2506.1882…

9 months ago 13 1 2 0
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What is the geography of your academic impact?

Today we released new maps in Rankless.

Explore citation maps for 3.8M+ scholars, 29k+ institutions, & 100s of countries.

rankless.org/countries/chl

10 months ago 9 1 0 0
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¿Fuga de cerebros en EE UU? La oportunidad de oro que Europa está a punto de desaprovechar Muchos investigadores en el país norteamericano están más dispuestos que nunca a mudarse. Pero si queremos que consideren venirse, tenemos que ponernos serios

Los €500M anunciados por la UE para atraer talento a Europa, ¿son comparables con el pago anual del endowment de Harvard o Yale?

No, nuestro esfuerzo continental esta al nivel de Ohio State.

En esta columna pongo a Choose Europe en contexto y ofrezco unas soluciones.

elpais.com/ciencia/2025...

11 months ago 4 1 0 0
In higher-income countries, urban proximity has been shown to enhance workers’ skills and income, but less is known about low- and middle-income countries. This column examines how the income of initially poor workers in Brazil changes after urban migration. Wages go up immediately for migrants to both southern and northern Brazilian cities, but only in the wealthier southern cities do initially poor migrants see a longer-term positive effect. Workplace segregation appears to play a key role, as southern firms do more to bring skilled and unskilled workers together.

In higher-income countries, urban proximity has been shown to enhance workers’ skills and income, but less is known about low- and middle-income countries. This column examines how the income of initially poor workers in Brazil changes after urban migration. Wages go up immediately for migrants to both southern and northern Brazilian cities, but only in the wealthier southern cities do initially poor migrants see a longer-term positive effect. Workplace segregation appears to play a key role, as southern firms do more to bring skilled and unskilled workers together.

Cities in southern #Brazil appear to be places of opportunity for migrants, while northern cities offer immediate bonuses but show less of a permanent + trajectory. Workplace level segregation can explain this.
E Glaeser, M Viarengo, @cesifoti.bsky.social, R Barza
cepr.org/voxeu/column...
#EconSky

11 months ago 6 2 0 0
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Open postdoc position at @ceu-dnds.bsky.social in Vienna in the Computational Human Dynamics Lab of @martonkarsai.bsky.social on inequalities in 15-minutes cities in collaboration with www.dut-coline.org. Check it out: careers.ceu.edu/job/Vienna-P...
@ic2s2.bsky.social @netscisociety.bsky.social

1 year ago 27 29 0 1
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Optimizing Economic Complexity Viktor Stojkoski, and César Hidalgo, “Optimizing Economic Complexity”, TSE Working Paper, n. 24-1623, March 2025.

19. This was a great collaboration with the always amazing Viktor Stojkoski

You can download the working paper at:
www.tse-fr.eu/publications...

1 year ago 4 0 1 0