Sune Lehmann
Professor
Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science
Richard Petersens Plads
Building 321 Room 126
2800 Kgs. Lyngby
Danmark
I’m a Professor of Networks and Complexity Science at DTU Compute, Technical University of Denmark. I’m also a Professor of Social Data Science at the Center for Social Data Science (SODAS), University of Copenhagen. My work focuses on quantitative understanding of social systems based on massive data sets. A physicist by training, my research draws on approaches from the physics of complex systems, machine learning, and statistical analysis. I work on large-scale behavioral data and while my primary focus is on modeling complex networks, my research has made substantial contributions on topics such as human mobility, sleep, academic performance, complex contagion, epidemic spreading, and behavior on twitter. I'm a member of the Danish Royal Academy of Sciences and Letters. During the COVID-19 pandemic, I have served as a member of the task force established by the Danish government to model the spread in Denmark, and I've also been a part of the task force advising the Danish government on the Tech Giants. In the past, I’ve worked as a Postdoctoral Fellow at Institute for Quantitative Social Science at Harvard University and the College of Computer and Information Science at Northeasthern University; before that, I was at Laszlo Barabási’s Center for Complex Network Research at Northeastern University and the Center for Cancer Systems Biology at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute. I’m a graduate of the Niels Bohr Institute (B.Sc, Physics 2001, M.Sc, Physics, 2003) and the Technical University of Denmark (Ph.D., Complex Networks, 2007).