András Pellinoisz

Date of birth:
1943.
Place of birth:
Budapest
Education, professional qualification:
  • Electrical Engineer - BME - 1966.
  • Academic degree:
    Doctor of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences - 1989.

    Between 1967 and 1973, he worked at the Institute of Anatomy led by János Szentágothai at Semmelweis University of Medicine (SOTE).
    From 1973, he continued his career at Stanford University in Silicon Valley, California; then in 1976, he became a professor at the Department of Biophysics at New York University Medical Center until 1998. Meanwhile, he became a candidate of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (biology, 1975) and then a doctorate (physics, 1989) at home.

    He then conducted research as a visiting professor at several universities (Paris, Marburg). In 1998, he received the "Distinguished Senior American Scientist" award from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.

    In 2008, he founded and leads the genome informatics company HolGenTech, Inc. (Silicon Valley, Sunnyvale, California, USA), specializing in the mathematization of biology, neural networks, and genome informatics. He is credited with founding two scientific fields: the Tensor Network Theory of Neural Networks (Neurophilosophy) and the Recursive Genome Function (FractoGene); with the latter, he is the discoverer of the fractal interpretation of the genome.

    In Hungary, he was a member of the board of the Medical Biology Department of the National Institute of Health Sciences from 1973. He gave lectures at several Neumann Colloquia in Szeged (e.g. on computer simulation of the functioning of cerebellar cortical neuronal networks). In 2012, he was awarded the Pentagram Prize by Bangalore-Hyderabad-Trivandum in India, within the framework of which he held a lecture tour throughout India.

    And what else is important
    • The "International PostGenetics Society" he founded attempted to bring Genome Informatics to Budapest at its conference in 2006, but this was ultimately implemented in India.
    • An unexpected interesting feature of Fractogen is that, days after the outbreak of the pandemic, French Nobel laureate Luc Montagnier and his colleague Jean-Claude Perez, through a fractal analysis of the genome of the Covid-19 virus, suggested its unnatural origin, as it does not follow the fractal genome development of evolution.

    Created: 2023.03.27. 20:44
    Last modified: 2024.03.23. 21:51
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