Professor Martin B. Short

CAM Assistant Adjunct Professor
UCLA Mathematics Department
Los Angeles, CA, USA 90095-1555
Office Math Sciences 7380
Office Hours W, 1-4 pm
E-mail
Phone (310) 825-9369


Preprints

[1] M. McBride, R. Kendall, M.B. Short, and M.R. D'Orsogna, Crime, punishment, and evolution in an adversarial game, preprint (2012)

Published Works

[21] M.R. D'Orsogna, R. Kendall, M. McBride, and M.B. Short,  Criminal Defectors Lead to the Emergence of Cooperation in an Experimental, Adversarial Game, accepted in PLOS ONE (2013)

[20] S.G. McCalla, P.J. Brantingham, and M.B. Short, The effects of sacred value networks within an evolutionary, adversarial game, J. Stat. Phys. 151 (2013)

[19] M.B. Short, G.O. Mohler, P.J. Brantingham, and G.E. Tita, Gang rivalry dynamics via coupled point process networks, accepted in DCDS (2013)

[18] M.B. Short, A.B. Pitcher, and M.R. D'Orsogna, External conversions of player strategy in an evolutionary game: a cost-benefit analysis through optimal control, EJAM 24 (2013)

[17] P.J. Brantingham, G.E. Tita, M.B. Short, and S. Reid, The ecology of gang territorial boundaries, Criminology 50 (2012)

[16] G.O. Mohler and M.B. Short, Geographic profiling from kinetic models of criminal behavior, SIAP 72 (2012)

[15] A. Stomakhin, M.B. Short, and A.L. Bertozzi, Reconstruction of missing data in social networks based on temporal patterns of interactions, Inverse Problems 27 (2011)

[14] P.J. Brantingham and M.B. Short, Crime Emergence, in When Crime Appears: the Role of Emergence, edited by J.M. McGloin, C. Sullivan, and L.W. Kennedy, New York: Routledge (2011)

[13] M. Gonzalez, D. Hermina, E. Huang, J. Irvine, C.H. Hsieh, Y.R. Huang, M.B. Short, and A.L. Bertozzi, A third generation micro-vehicle testbed for cooperative control and sensing strategies, ICINCO Proceedings (2011)

[12] G.O. Mohler, M.B. Short, P.J. Brantingham, F.P. Schoenberg, and G.E. Tita, Self-exciting point process modeling of crime, JASA 106 (2011)

[11] M.B. Short, P.J. Brantingham, and M.R. D'Orsogna, Cooperation and punishment in an adversarial game: How defectors pave the way to a peaceful society, Phys. Rev. E 82 (2010)

[10] M.B. Short, A.L. Bertozzi, and P.J. Brantingham, Nonlinear patterns in urban crime - Hotspots, bifurcations, and suppression, SIADS 9 (2010)

[9] M.B. Short, P.J. Brantingham, A.L. Bertozzi, and G.E. Tita, Dissipation and displacement of hotspots in reaction-diffusion models of crime, from the cover of PNAS 107 (2010) (supporting information here)

[8] W. Liu, Y.E. Taima, M.B. Short, and A.L. Bertozzi, Multi-scale collaborative searching through swarmingICINCO Proceedings (2010)

[7] M.B. Short, M.R. D'Orsogna, P.J. Brantingham, and G.E. Tita, Measuring and modeling repeat and near-repeat burglary effectsJ. Quant. Criminol. 25 (2009)

[6] M.B. Short, M.R. D'Orsogna, V.B. Pasour, G.E. Tita, P.J. Brantingham, A.L. Bertozzi, and L.B. Chayes, A statistical model of criminal behavior, M3AS 18 (2008)

[5] M.B. Short, Fluids, Form, and Function: The Role of Fluid Dynamics in the Evolution of Stalactites, Icicles, and Aquatic Microorganisms, PhD dissertation, University of Arizona (2006)

[4] M.B. Short, J.C. Baygents, and R.E. Goldstein, A free-boundary theory for the shape of the ideal dripping icicle, Phys. Fluids 18 (2006)

[3] M.B. Short, C.A. Solari, S. Ganguly, T.R. Powers, J. Kessler, and R.E. Goldstein, Flows driven by flagella of multicellular organisms enhance long-range molecular transport, from the cover of PNAS 103 (2006)

[2] M.B. Short, J.C. Baygents, and R.E. Goldstein, Stalactite growth as a free-boundary problem, Phys. Fluids 17 (2005)

[1] M.B. Short, J.C. Baygents, J.W. Beck, D.A. Stone, R.S. Toomey, and R.E. Goldstein, Stalactite growth as a free-boundary problem: A geometric law and its platonic ideal, PRL 94 (2005)

Works Plagiarized by Others
Unfortunately, sometimes people copy your work and claim it as their own.  Here is a collection of known papers that plagiarize from myself and my co-authors:

[2] M. VijayKumar and C. Chandrasekar, A Mathematical Framework for Analyzing and Representing Recur and Near-recur Results in Burglary Crime Data, published in IJMA 2 (2011), plagiarized from publication [7] above.

[1] M. VijayKumar and C. Chandrasekar, Spatial Statistical Model for Predicting Crime Behavior Based On the Analysis of Hotspot Mapping, published in EJSR 54 (2011), plagiarized from publication [6] above.