Major contributions of Douglas R. White: • White was known for
Cross-cultural studies, studies of the
division of labor, sexual division of labor, polygyny, marriage and
kinship, his collaborative creation of the
Standard Cross-Cultural Sample (SCCS), and public domain distribution of SCCS data, courseware and software, which has given way to the UCI Complex Social Science Gateway that hosts Anthropology's Ethnographics of the Lives of World Peoples along with software used in solving
Galton's problem of autocorrelation for analysis of observational data, and for research on: •
Longitudinal historical evolution and field studies of human groups, larger societies, and city systems •
Mathematical modeling of social, economic, and historical dynamics, as well as statistical
entailment analysis,
Galton's problem, the Natchez Paradox,
Structural endogamy and network simulation,
regular equivalence, flow
centrality, and
structural cohesion, •
Social networks, including, more specifically, the network realism paradigm, • Social complexity and
complex-network system dynamics. •
Standard Cross-Cultural Sample •
System dynamics Studies of world system dynamics and urban studies, including his current studies of urban dynamics over the last millennium, A reaction to his latest book,
Network Analysis and Ethnographic Problems, by one reviewer, was that this "could be the most important book in anthropology in fifty years." His work on implications of feedback and feedforward processes, published in
Physical Review in collaboration with the founder of
nonextensive physics, a founder of
chaos theory, and two young computer scientists, provides one of the foundational network simulations for understanding complex networks. White's Main page hosts a public server, that if used externally at http://SocSciCompute.ss.uci.edu, offers ethnographic data, variables and tools for inference with R scripts by Dow (2007) and Eff and Dow (2009) in an NSF supported Galaxy (http://getgalaxy.org) framework (https://www.xsede.org) for instructors, students and researchers to do cross-cultural research modeling with controls for Galton's problem using Standard Cross-Cultural Sample variables at https://web.archive.org/web/20160402201432/https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/9256203/SCCScodebook.txt. == Books ==