Skip to main content

Erez Hatna

Erez Hatna

Erez Hatna

Scroll

Clinical Associate Professor of Epidemiology

Professional overview

Dr. Erez Hatna works in the fields of geoinformatics, spatial analysis, agent-based modeling, and studies urban dynamics, residential segregation, scaling laws of urban systems, and infectious disease modeling.

Dr. Hatna studies ethnic and economic residential patterns of cities using agent-based computational models of relocating households. The models simulate the formation of residential patterns as an outcome of relocation decisions of households. Dr. Hatna also studies the statistical regularities of urban systems and urban scaling. His research focuses on how the choice of urban boundaries influences the scaling relationships.

At NYU, Dr. Hatna is part of the Agent-based Modeling Lab, which works with large-scale epidemic models and cognitively plausible agents in order to produce a transformative synthesis for global public health modeling. Previously, he has conducted research at Wageningen University, University College London, and Johns Hopkins University.

Education

PhD, Geography, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel
MA, Geography, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel

Areas of research and study

Agent-Based Modeling
Epidemiology
Geographic Information Science (GIS)
Geospatial Methods
Infectious Diseases
Mathematical and Computational Modeling
Modeling Social and Behavioral Dynamics
Urban Informatics

Publications

Publications

An Agent-Based Model to Assess Possible Interventions for Large Shigellosis Outbreaks

Failed retrieving data.

An agent-based model to assess possible interventions for large shigellosis outbreaks

Failed retrieving data.

Simulating the simultaneous impact of medication for opioid use disorder and naloxone on opioid overdose death in eight New York counties

Failed retrieving data.

The role of analytical models and their impacts on urban studies and policy. Urban Studies

Failed retrieving data.

Generating Mixed Patterns of Residential Segregation : An Evolutionary Approach

Failed retrieving data.

Special Section on "Inverse Generative Social Science" : Guest Editors’ Statement

Failed retrieving data.

At the Boundary of Law and Software : Toward Regulatory Design with Agent-Based Modeling

Failed retrieving data.

Privacy and contact tracing efficacy

Failed retrieving data.

Coresidency of Immigrant Groups in a Diverse Inner-City Neighborhood of Whitechapel, London

Failed retrieving data.

Triple contagion : A two-fears epidemic model

Failed retrieving data.

Evidence for localization and urbanization economies in urban scaling

Failed retrieving data.

Defining urban clusters to detect agglomeration economies

Failed retrieving data.

Diverse cities or the systematic paradox of Urban Scaling Laws

Failed retrieving data.

Cities and regions in Britain through hierarchical percolation

Failed retrieving data.

Defining urban agglomerations to detect agglomeration economies

Failed retrieving data.

Regions and cities in Britain through hierarchical percolation

Failed retrieving data.

Combining segregation and integration : Schelling model dynamics for heterogeneous population

Failed retrieving data.

Constructing cities, deconstructing scaling laws

Failed retrieving data.

On the problem of boundaries and scaling for urban street networks

Failed retrieving data.

Paradoxical Interpretations of Urban Scaling Laws

Failed retrieving data.

Universal properties for Urban street networks

Failed retrieving data.

Combining segregation and integration: Schelling model dynamics for heterogeneous population

Failed retrieving data.

Influence of provider and urgent care density across different socioeconomic strata on outpatient antibiotic prescribing in the USA

Failed retrieving data.

Mobilizing Ebola survivors to curb the epidemic

Failed retrieving data.

Assessing spatial uncertainties of land allocation using a scenario approach and sensitivity analysis : A study for land use in Europe

Failed retrieving data.

Contact

erez.hatna@nyu.edu 708 Broadway New York, NY, 10003