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Sebastian Grauwin

Researcher at University of Lyon

Publications -  45
Citations -  1859

Sebastian Grauwin is an academic researcher from University of Lyon. The author has contributed to research in topics: Preference (economics) & Game theory. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 44 publications receiving 1640 citations. Previous affiliations of Sebastian Grauwin include Centre national de la recherche scientifique & École normale supérieure de Lyon.

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'The whole is always smaller than its parts': a digital test of Gabriel Tardes' monads.

TL;DR: It is claimed that the new availability of digital data sets allows one to revisit Gabriel Tarde's social theory that entirely dispensed with using notions such as individual or society and that such a practice could modify social theory if it could visualize this new type of exploration in a coherent way.
Journal ArticleDOI

The scaling of human interactions with city size

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that both the total number of contacts and the total communication activity grow superlinearly with city population size, according to well-defined scaling relations and resulting from a multiplicative increase that affects most citizens.
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The scaling of human interactions with city size

TL;DR: It is shown that both the total number of contacts and the total communication activity grow superlinearly with city population size, according to well-defined scaling relations and resulting from a multiplicative increase that affects most citizens.
Journal ArticleDOI

Competition between collective and individual dynamics

TL;DR: This work solves exactly a Schelling-like segregation model, which interpolates continuously between cooperative and individual dynamics, and shows that increasing the degree of cooperativity induces a qualitative transition from a segregated phase of low utility toward a mixed phase of high utility.
Book ChapterDOI

Towards a Comparative Science of Cities: Using Mobile Traffic Records in New York, London, and Hong Kong

TL;DR: A universal structure of cities is revealed, with core financial centers all sharing similar activity patterns and commercial or residential areas with more city-specific patterns, while the impact of local conditions still remains recognizable on the level of routine people activity.