Age, Biography and Wiki

Alberto Pinto was born on 23 February, 1964 in Porto, Portugal, is a Portuguese mathematics professor (born 1964). Discover Alberto Pinto's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 60 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation N/A
Age 60 years old
Zodiac Sign Pisces
Born 23 February 1964
Birthday 23 February
Birthplace Porto, Portugal
Nationality Portuguese

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 23 February. He is a member of famous professor with the age 60 years old group.

Alberto Pinto Height, Weight & Measurements

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Alberto Pinto Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Alberto Pinto worth at the age of 60 years old? Alberto Pinto’s income source is mostly from being a successful professor. He is from Portuguese. We have estimated Alberto Pinto's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
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Source of Income professor

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Timeline

Alberto Adrego Pinto is a full professor at the Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Sciences, University of Porto (Portugal).

He is a researcher of the Laboratory of Artificial Intelligence and Decision Support, Institute for Systems and Computer Engineering LIAAD, INESC TEC.

He is the founder and editor-in-chief of the Journal of Dynamics and Games, published by the American Institute of Mathematical Sciences (AIMS).

He is the President of the Portuguese International Center for Mathematics (CIM).

Currently, he is also a Special Visiting Researcher from CNPq at Instituto Nacional de Matemática Pura e Aplicada (IMPA), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

1978

Furthermore, de Faria, de Melo and Pinto proved the conjecture raised in 1978 in the work of Feigenbaum and Coullet-Tresser which the characterizes the period-doubling boundary between chaos and order for unimodal maps.

1986

Pinto was an undergraduate student in applied mathematics at University of Porto (1986).

1989

Pinto worked with David Rand on his master's thesis (1989) that studied the work of Mitchell Feigenbaum and Dennis Sullivan on scaling functions and he went on to a PhD (1991) on the universality features of other classes of maps that form the boundary between order and chaos.

During this time Pinto met a number of the leaders in dynamical systems, notably Dennis Sullivan and Maurício Peixoto, and this had a great impact on his career.

1998

He did his MSc with distinction (1998) and his PhD (1991) in mathematics at University of Warwick, UK.

1999

He was a member of the steering committee of Probabilistic Methods in Non-Hyperbolic Dynamics (Prodyn) at the European Science Foundation (1999–2001).

2002

He did his Aggregation in Applied Mathematics (2002), passing with unanimous vote, at University of Porto.

2006

This appeared in the research article "Global Hyperbolicity of Renormalization for Smooth Unimodal Mappings" published at the journal Annals of Mathematics (2006) and was based in particular in the previous works of Sandy Davie, Dennis Sullivan, Curtis T. McMullen and Mikhail Lyubich.

Since then Pinto has branched out into more applied areas.

He has contributed across a remarkably broad area of science including optics, game theory and mathematical economics, finance, immunology, epidemiology, and climate and energy.

In these applied areas, he has published widely overpassing more than one hundred scientific articles.

2009

He was the executive coordinator (2009–2010) of the Scientific Council of Exact Sciences and Engineering at the Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia.

He is currently the President of the International Center for Mathematics (CIM), Portugal and has started the "CIM Mathematical Sciences Series" to be published by Springer-Verlag.

Pinto has made numerous significant scientific research contributions that are recognized internationally in the field of dynamical systems, game theory and applications.

The scientific papers resulting from his achievements have been published in some of the most prestigious scientific research journals in the world, for example, Annals of Mathematics, Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, Journal of the London Mathematical Society, Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society and Communications in Mathematical Physics.

In addition, he has authored books published in prestigious scientific series, like Springer Monographs in Mathematics, and have edited similar titles, one of which initiated the new Springer Proceedings series in Mathematics.

He supervised many PhD students.

The impact and significance of his contributions has resulted in many presentations at top international conferences around the world, such as the International Congress of Mathematicians (ICM), the International Congress on Industrial and Applied Mathematics (ICIAM), the European Conference on Operational Research (EURO), the Conference of the Society for the Advancement of Economic Theory (SAET), the Public Economic Theory Conference (PET), the European Conference on Mathematical and Theoretical Biology (ECMTB), the Palestinian Conference in Modern Trends in Mathematics and Physics (PCMTMP), the Australasian Meeting of the Econometric Society (ESAM), the South and South East Asia Econometric Society Meeting (SAMES), Latin American Meeting of the Econometric Society (LAMES) and the International Conference of the Society on Difference Equations (ICDEA).

Citing the words of Jacob Palis and Enrique Pujals in the preface of Pinto–Ferreira–Rand's Springer monograph: "All the smooth conjugacy classes of a given topological model are classified using Pinto's and Rand's HR structures".

Melo-Pinto's Communications in Mathematical Physics paper proves the rigidity of the unimodal maps in the boundary between chaos and order.

Pinto and Rand's Nonlinearity paper proved the existence of a universal constant 2.11 that is the degree of smoothness of the conjugacy between infinitely renormalizable unimodal maps.

Almeida–Portela–Pinto's TAMS paper exhibits new tilings determined by circle diffeomorphisms that are low smoothness fixed points of renormalization.

Alves–Pinheiro–Pinto's paper in JLMS proved that if a topological conjugacy between multimodal maps is smooth at a point in the expanding set then the conjugacy is smooth in a renormalization interval.

Carvalho–Peixoto–Pinheiro–Pinto's TAMS paper makes a clear connection between the otherwise distant concepts of focal decomposition, renormalization and semiclassical physics.

Pinto's paper in JDG created new models to study the appearance of sudden social and political disruptions using the replicator equation in the theory of planned behavior.

Pliska–Pinheiro–Pinto Optimization paper determined the optimal life insurance purchase in a continuous-time model where the individual's lifetime is modeled through the concept of uncertain lifetime found in reliability theory.

Pinto–Pinheiro–Yannacopoulos's JDEA paper study price formation in the Arrow–Debreu financial models with multiple assets from an unconventional perspective using Edgeworthian exchange models.

2010

As a result, he and his collaborators have made many important contributions to the study of the fine-scale structure of dynamical systems and this has appeared in leading journals and in his book "Fine Structures of Hyperbolic Diffeomorphisms" (2010) coauthored with Flávio Ferreira and David Rand.

While a postdoc with Dennis Sullivan at the CUNY Graduate Center at City University of New York he met Edson de Faria and through Maurício Peixoto he got in contact with Welington de Melo.

With de Melo he proved the rigidity of smooth unimodal maps in the boundary between chaos and order extending the work of Curtis T. McMullen.

2011

He edited two volumes, with Maurício Peixoto and David Rand, entitled "Dynamics and Games I and II" (2011).

These two volumes initiated the new Springer Proceedings in Mathematics series.

2014

Pinto with Michel Benaïm founded the Journal of Dynamics and Games (2014) of the American Institute of Mathematical Sciences (AIMS) and they are the editors in chief.

He has also increasingly taken on important administrative tasks.

2015

He edited with David Zilberman the volume entitled "Optimization, Dynamics, Modeling and Bioeconomy I" (2015) that will appear at Springer Proceedings in Mathematics & Statistics series.