Damien Challet

Full professor (HDR). Associate editor for Quantitative Finance Journal of Economic Interaction and Coordination, Journal of Statistical Mechanics: theory and experiments. Co-chief editor of Market Microstructure and Liquidity. Previously associate editor for Applied Mathematical Finance (2006-2018).  

Research interests
Coordinates

Room: SC.113, Bouyges building damien.challet@centralesupelec.fr Tel.:  +33-(0) 1 75 31 67 55

Publications
Bio
See my CV.
Source code

There is no reason to open-source mathematical computations and not computer code when submitting a paper. My repositories may be found on github.com. Some recent contributions:

Teaching resources

Current courses

Previous courses

Internships

I will gladly supervise Master theses on a topic that is related to my interests (and, incidentally, abilities). Please check that yours are compatible with mine before contacting me. Note that the whole administrative process takes more than 3 months before the start of the internship.  

Press Coverage (non-exhaustive list)
  1. ::: article-label Minority Game: What stock investors can learn from the failure of Black Friday, Paul Ormerod, CITY A.M., 2 December 2015 :::

  2. Tweaking taps for a constantly warm shower, New Scientist, 16 February 2008, p. 18

  3. The maths behind group showers Philip Ball, Nature (18/01/2008)

  4. Showered in surprises  Michael Banks, Physics World, Volume 21 No 2, February 2008

  5. Openness makes software better sooner Nature Science update (2003)

  6. Open wide... Maths.org (2003)

  7. Le bazar et la cathédrale, ou comment l'Open Source élimine les bugs plus rapidement (2003)

  8. Forscher: Freierhältliche Quelltexte verbessern die Qualitaet von Computerprogrammen Wissenshaft.de (2003)

  9. Open Source liefert mehr Qualitaet silicon.de (2003)

  10. Debugging in OSS Always Faster  slashdot.org (2003)

  11. Collective Effort Makes the Good Times Roll, Adrian Cho Science 2002 July 5; 297: 33

  12. Whole better than parts Nature Science update (2002)

  13. N/2 Wrongs Make a Right Physical Review Focus (2002)

  14. Defects combine to make perfect devices Physics Web (2002

links

social