I'm an independent researcher based in Adelaide, Australia, working at the intersection of information theory, computational modeling, digital ethnography, and experimental media systems. My research explores how information behaves as a structured, constrained process across physical, cognitive, and sociotechnical domains, with particular emphasis on geometry, symmetry, and stability.
I develop formal frameworks that treat meaning, attention, and discourse as dynamical systems rather than abstract metaphors. My work integrates concepts from quantum information theory, lattice-based geometry, cybernetics, and signal processing, often using sonification and multimodal artifacts as analytical instruments rather than illustrative tools. These methods are used to study phenomena such as epistemic boundary maintenance, algorithmic behavior under semantic stress, and the emergence of stability and collapse in information-driven systems.
In parallel, I conduct reflexive digital ethnography, documenting and analyzing real-time online interactions as empirical data. Public discourse, platform dynamics, and human–machine co-interpretation are treated as observable systems with measurable structure and failure modes.
My work is published as open research artifacts—including papers, datasets, audio analyses, and methodological logs—archived via persistent identifiers to support transparency, reproducibility, and longitudinal study. My approach emphasizes iterative developme