Scouting report
Puerto Rico biodiversity data scientist applying R and Python to ecology
assessed from open-source footprint
Dr. Catherine Hulshof is an associate professor working at the intersection of biodiversity science and data, coding primarily in R, Python, and Jupyter with a supporting research lab website. Her strongest original work is domain-specific and credible, notably an 'AI for butterflies' project using digitized museum collections (3 stars) and a 'Data Science Basics for Scientists in Parks' site. Output is research-cadence rather than production software, with every repo flagged abandoned and recent commit activity unrecorded, so value her as a specialist scientific-computing practitioner, not a software shipper.
Authorship & open source
Contributes to
- CU-ESIIL/VERDE0★
What they build
Industry experience
- Data, ML & AI
- Education & EdTech
Signal breakdown
6
top repo 3
11
42% forks
10
10 yr
1
Quiet
100% stale
Strengths
- Verified author — wrote 80% of commits on ai-for-butterflies
- 26 merged pull requests
- Data / ML focus with Frontend
- Domain experience in Data, ML & AI & Education & EdTech
- Core stack: R, HTML, Jupyter, Python
About
Skills
- R
- Jupyter
- HTML
- Python
- Data Analysis In R
- Data Management
- Data Organization
- Data Visualization In R
Featured work
Ai For Butterflies
AI for butterfly wing size and color using digitized museum collections
- Jupyter
by Dr. Catherine Hulshof
Catherinehulshof Github Io
Data Science Basics for Scientists in Parks
- Code
by Dr. Catherine Hulshof
Academic Diversity Disparity Map
A map demonstrating the disparity between percent minority students and percent minority faculty for colleges and universities across the United Stat…
- R
by Dr. Catherine Hulshof
catherinehulshof
My personal repository
- Code
by Dr. Catherine Hulshof
2024 05 06 Vcu
Virginia Commonwealth University Workshop, May 2024
- HTML
- Data Analysis In R
- Data Management
- Data Organization
- Data Visualization In R
by Dr. Catherine Hulshof
Hola Mundo
In-class repository
- Code
by Dr. Catherine Hulshof