Bio

Bruce LaDuke is a social architect and futurist. He lives in Indianapolis, Indiana with his wife, Brenna, and four children; Jordan, Jared, Jonathan, and Hanna.
Bruce has developed a theory and method of artificial innovation with a corresponding performance model that both fit into a larger social architecture.
The key to artificial innovation is understanding the core algorithm of the human mind. All creativity, creative problem solving, and innovation methods work by this single algorithm.
- Speaker Page
- Facebook Page
- Twitter Page
- Scriptsphere.com (Internet TV portal)
- Art Gallery, see also: Deviant Art
Published Papers and Presentations
- A concise framework for medical education terminology, Erin Kingshill, Bruce LaDuke and Steve Willis, Journal of Medical Marketing 9: 131-139; advance online publication, June 5, 2009; doi:10.1057/jmm.2009.13
- Integral Futuring – Pecha Kucha, April 2008, Indianapolis, IN.
- Contributing Author – Collective Intelligence – Creating a Prosperous World at Peace, Earth Intelligence Network, Oakton, VA. Section Authored: Knowledge Creation in Collective Intelligence.
- Contributing Author – 2007 State of the Future - The Millenium Project, World Federation of UN Associations, Jerome C. Glenn and Theordore J. Gordon
- Future Decision – Proteus Futures Workshop, August 14-16, 2007 -
- Beyond Polanyi – e.Learning Age – Biz Media – Europe – Jul/Aug 2005.
- Knowledge Creation: The Quest for Questions – The Futurist. Washington: Jan/Feb 2004.Vol.38, Iss. 1; pg. 68.
- Anti-Knowledge and Ten Immutable Knowledge Creation Laws – SCI 2002, the 6th World Multiconference on Systemics, Cybernetics, and Informatics.
- Knowledge Machine, the Creativity Key to Exponential and Mechanized Knowledge Advance, World View 2002: Futures Unlimited, World Future Society, Philadelphia, PA.
- American Creativity Association:
- Feb 1999, Definition, Question and the Creativity Engine, Volume 10, No 1
- Feb 2001, Creativity in the Third Dimension, Volume 1, No 1
Contact Information:
bruceladuke at gmail dot com
(use the @ sign instead of the word ‘at’ and remove spaces and use a period instead of the word ‘dot’)