Hyejin Youn is an Associate Professor of Management & Organization Department at the Kellogg School of Management, and a core faculty at NICO, the Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems. She is also a Royal Society of Arts fellow and an external fellow at the London Mathematical Laboratory, London, UK. Prior to joining Kellogg, she worked at the University of Oxford, Harvard University, MIT Media Lab, and Santa Fe Institute as a research fellow. Hyejin received her PhD in Physics in 2011 from Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST). She was a Principal Investigator of the project, a National Science Foundation grant (USA) to study Technological Change from the Map of Capabilities.
Her research interests are to understand the interplay between technological innovation and socio-economic systems (urbanization, economic diversity and specialization, invention activity, and the future of work). Her highly interdisciplinary approach often results in broad collaborations ranging from mathematicians, computer scientists, economists, sociologists, and anthropologists to archeologists. Her work has been published in general audience journals such as Nature Communication, Science Advances, and PNAS, as well as top specialized journals such as Physics Review Letter and Evolutionary Anthropology, and has been featured in The Economist, Forbes, The Guardian, WIRED, Scientific America, MIT Technology Review, among other major global media outlets. Her goal is to develop a theoretical yet empirically grounded framework that will enable us to turn the increasing volumes of data into scientific insights and well-designed policies, an approach known as computational social science. The mathematical tools and computational methods that are used include scaling theory, spatial analysis (including percolation theory, information theory, and fractal dimension analysis), statistics, and network theory.