About
Omnivalence Consulting Group was conceived to separate the signal from the noise when it comes to applications of data science to your enterprise
Life is complicated, and technology shouldn't make it moreso. We believe in the premise of using mathematical rigor and the life of the law to properly model business practices and processes, augmenting potential with the judicious application of correctly specified algorithms.
Alexander Berenbeim
Partner
Alexander Berenbeim is the lead research mathematician and technical consultant. He received a Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at Chicago in Pure Mathematics, an MMath in Pure Mathematics from the University of Waterloo, and an MSc in Management Science and Engineering from Columbia University. As a PhD student, his activities included co-founding and running the Math For The Real World seminar, where he overviewed formal approaches to abstraction of problems for programming in C and OCaml. During his Masters degrees, he also consulted for several organization, among them, MedImpact Healthcare Systems, Inc., Prodigy Network, and the World Science Festival. His research interests in applied model theory and topos theory are reinforced by his broader interests in formal specification theory. Alexander Berenbeim has been fascinated with formal approaches to modeling stories and human behavior since he first started making films.
His technical talks and papers can be found here.
Karman Lucero
Partner
Karman Lucero is the lead legal consultant and strategist for Omnivalence Consulting Group. He is also a Fellow at the Paul Tsai China Center at Yale Law School, which he joined in July 2018 after working for the Data & Society Research Institute and Microsoft’s US Government Affairs Office, where he focused on issues related to artificial intelligence law and policy, telecom law and policy, and criminal justice reform. He received a J.D. from Columbia Law School, where he was a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar and Editor-In-Chief of the Columbia Journal of Asian Law. As a law student, he studied Chinese administrative and judicial reform at Peking University, interned with the US Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control and the Defense Team of Nuon Chea at the United Nations Assistance to the Khmer Rouge Trials, and also worked for a group of human rights lawyers in Nepal during the drafting of Nepal’s new Constitution. Prior to law school, he was a Teaching Fellow in Manghuai Township in Yunnan with Teach for China. Karman speaks and reads Mandarin Chinese.