Academic research
Analytica is used for teaching and research in many leading universities across the world. Professors find it an ideal tool for students to learn the science and art of building effective decision models with. Its visual influence diagrams encourage students to conceptualize complex problems in the same way an expert modeler would, without getting bogged down in the detail of cell formulas. Its Intelligent Arrays help new modelers start out with a simple model and then add detail as needed.
We offer Analytica at about half-price for funded research for students and faculty

Publications using Analytica
Explore the power of the Analytica software and how it has been utilized in diverse fields through various journal articles and publications.

Students & faculty
Analytica is used in research and teaching of quantitative modeling and decision analysis in leading universities around the world. Learn about our discounted rates.

Could humans lose control over advanced AI?
Researchers used Analytica's influence diagrams to map out arguments and scenarios exploring risks with artificial intelligence (AI).

Making jet fuel from the sun & wind
Learn more on how Evan Sherwin employed an optimization-based techno-economic analysis, implemented in Analytica, to assess the prospects for large cost reductions.

Social influences in modeling energy decarbonization
Discover how blending social dynamics with energy models revolutionizes climate policy, offering sustainable, culturally-informed solutions.

Converting greenhouse gases into fish food
Methanotrophic bacteria may be able to both replace fishmeal and provide incentivize to capture potent greenhouse gases that are directly emitted into the atmosphere.

US gas leaks much larger than previously estimated
A new Stanford-led study on natural gas leak rates from oil and gas activity across a large fraction of the US are about 3x more than previous government estimates. The…

Quantifying methane emissions
Aerial surveys found that a small number of high-impact super-emitting events are responsible for most methane emissions, which were significantly higher than previously estimated.
Some Analytica customers




