Ken Mendoza

Hi, I'm Ken Mendoza

Founder & Principal Investigator, MendozaLab · Independent researcher

Welcome — I'm Ken, the one usually three studies deep at the kitchen table while Toni writes. I'm an independent researcher who works where information theory, geometry, and computational science overlap, and I'm the voice behind Ken's Research Notes here at Fibro Hub. When Toni shares what living with fibromyalgia is actually like, I'm often the one chasing the why — the mechanisms, the studies, the math underneath. Based in Waldport, Oregon, between the lab and the bay.

What I actually do

I run MendozaLab, an independent research lab. My work takes information-theoretic tools — things like Minimum Description LengthA principle from information theory: the best explanation of some data is the shortest one that still reproduces it., Koopman–von Neumann operators, and a Shannon–von Neumann–Riemannian entropy hierarchy — and points them at problems that normally live in completely separate fields: pure mathematics, materials science, dynamical systems, and climate detection.

The throughline is parsimony: the simplest description that still explains the data is usually the truest one. It turns out that single idea travels remarkably well across domains. Everything I do is computational — run in-silico on public datasets or documented reference systems, with the artifacts kept so the results can be checked.

A few threads I'm proud of

Toni's note

Ken is the person who reads forty papers so I don't have to, then explains the one that matters while making coffee. Every "Ken's Research Notes" box on this site started as a conversation at our kitchen table — usually with Samba walking across the keyboard mid-sentence.

The long way here

I didn't start in pure math. My background is in proteomics and computational biology — about twenty-five years of it, across bioinformatics, drug-target identification, and software architecture. Somewhere in there I got hooked on a single question: what is the simplest true description of a complex system? That question slowly pulled me out of biology and into the cross-domain work I do now. The pivot is basically the whole story.

CEO Memo from Samba

The human Ken produces an acceptable volume of warm laptops and serves as a reliable source of desk-adjacent body heat. His "proofs" are of no interest to me, yet I supervise them regardless, from the highest available perch. Conditionally approved.

Why I write here

Fibromyalgia is, underneath everything, a problem of a nervous system handling information badly — too much signal, not enough filter. That is squarely the kind of system I study. So when I write Research Notes for Fibro Hub, I'm not stepping outside my field; I'm bringing it home.

A thread from the physics side

In a recent note I argued that physical law might be fundamentally local — no master clock running the whole universe, just countless small processes each finishing on their own finite-rate schedule. That idea travels home uncomfortably well. Fibromyalgia behaves less like one broken switch and more like a system with no central conductor: lots of local signals firing, no clean global filter to settle them. The same parsimony tools I use on physics — find the simplest description that still fits — are how I try to read that noise here.

A note on what I am — and amn't

I'm a researcher, not a physician. Nothing I write here is medical advice, and a study showing something can happen isn't a promise it will happen for you. What I can do is tell you, honestly, what the research actually says — and where it doesn't say anything yet.

Come find me

~ Ken

Samba's note: This page was supervised from the warm laptop in question. The human Ken is operational. Kona remains on morale duty. Approved for publication.