Professor Mauro Mobilia

Professor Mauro Mobilia

Profile

I obtained my PhD in Theoretical Physics at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL) in 2002 for a thesis on non-equilibrium statistical physics. From 2002 to 2005, I was a postdoctoral fellow at Boston University and Virginia Tech on a Research Fellowship of the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF). In 2005, I was awarded a Humboldt Research Fellowship that I held at the University of Munich (LMU) until 2007. I then worked as an Advanced Research Fellow at the Mathematics Institute and Centre for Complexity Science of the University of Warwick (2007-2009) on another SNSF fellowship. In June 2008, I accepted a faculty position at the University of Leeds. Since 2009, I am at the School of Mathematics of the University of Leeds where I am a Full Professor of Applied Mathematics (Chair).

For more details: see my 2-page CV

I am the coordinator of the School of Maths’ Undergraduate Summer Bursary Scheme.

Responsibilities

  • Summer Bursary Scheme Coordinator (since 2013)
  • Organiser of the Maths-Bio-Medicine Seminar Series (2009-18)
  • Coordinator of the Applied Maths Postgraduate Seminar (2010-19)

Research interests

My current research is chiefly concerned with multidisciplinary applications of non-equilibrium statistical physics to problems of evolutionary dynamics and to complex systems in the life and behavioural sciences. Some important challenges in these areas concern the emergence of cooperative behaviour, the maintenance of biodiversity, the dynamics of cultural changes, and the self-organisation of mobile populations. In my research, mathematical modelling is usually at the individual-based level and leads to stochastic many-body problems. These are tackled by a combination of methods drawn from statistical physics, nonlinear dynamics and evolutionary game theory.

Examples of research outcomes include a series of works on 'rock-paper-scissors' games studying the self-organisation and biodiversity in cyclically competing populations, papers on the effects of 'zealots' in models of opinion dynamics, and works on metastability as well as the joint effects of demographic and environmental fluctuations. Recent research highlights concern the modelling of fluctuating populations subject to the coupling of demographic noise and environmental variability, inspired by the eco-evolutionary dynamics of microbial communities. These lines of investigation are pursued and broadened in the EPSRC-NSF funded international project “Eco-Evolutionary Dynamics of Fluctuating Populations”, notably with applications to antimicrobial resistance as a cooperative behaviour and under the time variation of toxins and nutrients.

Website of the Eco-Evolutionary Dynamics of Fluctuating Populations research collaboration: https://eedfp.com/people/

In July 2024, we organised the L24EEDs workshop “Mathematical modelling of microbial communities: cooperation, dynamics, and resistance” 

More details and links to all my research papers, as well as some videos, can be found on my research webpage.

Current Postdoctoral Research Associate at Leeds:

 Recently proposed PhD projects include

<h4>Research projects</h4> <p>Any research projects I'm currently working on will be listed below. Our list of all <a href="https://eps.leeds.ac.uk/dir/research-projects">research projects</a> allows you to view and search the full list of projects in the faculty.</p>

Qualifications

  • PhD (Dr. Sc. EPF)
  • MSc (Dipl. Phys. EPF)
  • FHEA (Fellow of the Higher Education Academy)

Professional memberships

  • Member of the U.K. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) College
  • Fellow of The Higher Education Academy (FHEA)
  • Member of the American Physical Society
  • Member of the European Physical Society
  • Member of the International Complex Systems Society
  • Member of the Humboldt Foundation's Network of Fellows
  • Member of the Society for Mathematical Biology
  • Member of the UKRI Future Leaders Fellowships Peer Review College
  • Member of the Royal Society’s Newton International Fellowships Committee

Student education

Teaching web page

Some subjects I teach at Leeds:

Current PhD students at Leeds (with source of funding):

  • Shaurya Pratap Singh (2024-present NERC scholarship)
  • Matthew Asker (2021-present, EPSRC scholarship)

Former PhD students at Leeds (with source(s) of funding):

  • Azhari Hasibuan (2024, Indonesian LPDP scholarship)
  • Xiang Li (2018-2024, China CSC scholarship)
  • Leonardo Miele (2017-2021, NERC scholarship)
  • Giacomo Baldo (2016-2021, UoL scholarship)
  • Robert West (2016-2020, EPSRC scholarship)
  • Fabio Peruzzo (2015-2019, NERC scholarship)
  • Alexander Murray (2018-2019, NERC scholarship)
  • Andrew Mellor (2013-2017, EPSRC CASE-KTN + Bloom Agency)
  • Maria Nowicka (2012-2018, EPSRC scholarship)
  • Bartosz Szczesny (2010-2014, EPSRC scholarship)

Research groups and institutes

  • Applied Mathematics
  • Mathematical Biology and Medicine
  • Applied Nonlinear Dynamics

Current postgraduate researchers

<h4>Postgraduate research opportunities</h4> <p>We welcome enquiries from motivated and qualified applicants from all around the world who are interested in PhD study. Our <a href="https://phd.leeds.ac.uk">research opportunities</a> allow you to search for projects and scholarships.</p>
Projects
    <li><a href="//phd.leeds.ac.uk/project/198-eco-evolutionary-dynamics-of-populations-in-fluctuating-environments">Eco-Evolutionary Dynamics of Populations in Fluctuating Environments</a></li> <li><a href="//phd.leeds.ac.uk/project/1311-evolutionary-game-theory-of-scarce-resources">Evolutionary game theory of scarce resources</a></li> <li><a href="//phd.leeds.ac.uk/project/199-modelling-biodiversity-and-pattern-formation-with-evolutionary-games">Modelling Biodiversity and Pattern Formation with Evolutionary Games</a></li> <li><a href="//phd.leeds.ac.uk/project/2039-opinion-dynamics-of-rational-agents">Opinion dynamics of rational agents</a></li> <li><a href="//phd.leeds.ac.uk/project/200-social-dynamics-and-emergence-of-collective-behaviour">Social Dynamics and Emergence of Collective Behaviour</a></li>