Anely Ph.D. Candidate
PhD in International Relations / Computational Social Scientist
Decoding Social Complexity
I bridge the gap between data science, neuroscience, and social systems to design evidence-based strategies for global peace and governance
We live in a world saturated with information yet starved for understanding
As a researcher at the intersection of Data Science and International Relations, my career has been a journey through the layers of systemic complexity. Throughout my PhD and master's degrees, I have analyzed how technology shapes collective behavior: from intercultural diplomacy between Germany and Mexico, to the self-organization of networks in crisis after the 19S earthquake, and the comparative analysis of smart governance in megacities such as Seoul, Tokyo, SĂ£o Paulo, and Mexico City.
However, my deepest perspective has been forged through an eight-year collaboration with the University of Tokyo (UTokyo). I have experienced firsthand the technological transition of our era: from manual data extraction in historical archives to the training and benchmarking of Large Language Models (LLMs). This longitudinal experience has revealed to me that today's technocracy, in its purely materialistic approach, has reached an ontological limit.
My current work transcends traditional data analysis to propose an applied Quantum Social Theory. My mission is to integrate the rigor of Machine Learning and biometrics with the study of consciousness, creating Conscious Governance and "Peace-Tech" protocols that use biological coherence as the ultimate metric of global peace and resilience.
Applied Research &
Data Visualization
Conscious Smart Governance
Digital Society & Collective Behaviour
AI, Development & Collective Well-being
The Frontier: Quantum Social Science & Consciousness
The next frontier of the social sciences is not just about more data, but about deeper data. I believe we are at a turning point where the materialist paradigm is no longer enough to explain global complexity.
Inspired by Quantum Social Theory (Wendt, 2015), my work explores the entanglement between subjective intent and objective social structures. I don't just ask if consciousness matters; I develop the frameworks to measure its macroscopic impact on peace, resilience, and collective evolution. For me, rigorous data science and the study of the 'invisible' are two sides of the same coin: the science of reality.