User:Physikite/Seth Baum

Seth Baum is an interdisciplinary researcher and executive director of the Global Catastrophic Risk Institute (GCRI), a think tank focused on existential risks. He is also affiliated with the Blue Marble Space Institute of Science and the Columbia University Center for Research on Environmental Decisions.

Academic career
Baum obtained his BS in Mathematics in 2007 at the University of Rochester, followed by an MS in Electrical Engineering, Northeastern University in 2006.

In 2012, he obtained his Ph.D in Geography with his dissertation on climate change policy: "Discounting Across Space and Time in Climate Change Assessment" from Pennsylvania State University. Later, he completed a post-doctoral fellowship with the Columbia University Center for Research on Environmental Decisions. Baum the steered his research interests into astrophysics and global risks, including global warming and nuclear war, and the development of effective solutions for reducing them.

Furthermore, he is a Fellow of the Society for Risk Analysis, has spoken in the Future of Humanity Institute at Oxford University and is an Affiliate Scholar for the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies.

Work
As a graduate student in Northstrom, Boston, Baum contributed to the Whats Up magazine (now Spare Change News), from 2004 to 2007, writing articles such as "Mathematical relationships and the big nerds who have relationships with them", and "Be counted", a special for the 2004 US elections.

In 2011, Baum co-founded GCRI along with Tony Barrett, with the mission to "develop the best ways to confront humanity's gravest threats". The institute has since grown very rapidly, publishing in peer-reviewed academic journals and leading popular media outlets. As of 2016, its main work is on the "Integrated Assessment Project", which asseses all the global catasthrophic risks in order to make them available for societal learning and decision making processes. GCRI is funded by "a mix of grants, private donations, and occasional consulting work.

Two years later, Baum hosted a regular blog on Scientific American and has been interviewed about his work and research in the History Channel and the O'Reilly Factor. , where he was asked about studying possible human contact with extraterrestrial life. He also started contributing regularly to The Huffington Post, writing about the Ukrainian crisis and the Syrian Civil War as possible scenarios for nuclear war.

In 2016, after receiving a 100,000 dollar grant from the Future of Life Institute his research interests shifted to AI safety and the ethics of outer space. That same year, he wrote a monthly column for the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, where he discussed AI threats, biological weapons and the risks of nuclear deterrence failure.