Dr. James B. Kadtke
James
B. Kadtke, Ph.D. is currently Senior Policy Analyst at the
National Nanotechnology Coordinating Office.
Jim has served as Executive Director of the
Accelerating Innovation Foundation, as adjunct faculty at the National
Defense University and George Mason University, and as a consultant to
the
government on policy and research in the defense, technology, and
homeland security areas.
Jim earned his Ph.D. in physics in the areas of chaos,
complexity, information science, and computational methods applied to
defense problems. After a graduate fellowship at Los Alamos National
Laboratory, he spent over ten years as a faculty at the Scripps
Institute of Oceanography in the national security
division.
From 1999 to 2001, he was a policy analyst in the Rand Science
and Technology Policy institute, focusing on developing new
methodologies to apply nonlinear science and complexity to policy
analysis. From 2001 to 2002, he served as a staff member and policy
analyst on the Science Committee in the US House of Representatives.
From 2002 to 2006, he served as the science advisor on the staff of
Senator John Warner of Virginia, and as a designee on the Senate Armed
Services Committee.
Jim coauthored
Linking Effectively:
International Cooperation in Science and Technology and
Assessing the Benefits and Costs of a Science Submarine, and
coedited
Predictability of Complex Dynamical Systems.
His patents include
Signal and pattern detection or classification by estimation of
continuous dynamical models and
Detection and classification system for analyzing deterministic
properties of data using correlation parameters.
His degrees are: B.S. Mathematics, Penn State University, 1979;
B.S. Physics, Penn State University, 1979;
Certificate in Science Policy, Penn State University, 1979;
M.S. Physics, Brown University, 1982; and
Ph.D. Physics, Brown University, 1987.
Read his
LinkedIn profile.