Biography and academic profile of the founder and architect of the Fractal Metascience Foundation.
Abdurashid Abdulkhamitovich Abdukarimov is an independent researcher, founder and chief architect of the Fractal Metascience Foundation. Developer of the Fractal Metascience Paradigm (FMP) — a comprehensive theoretical and practical framework for human-AI collaboration and knowledge organization. His work unifies ontology, semiotics, pedagogy and systems theory into a single paradigm, realized as a zero-budget operational ecosystem.
Graduate in German philology with extensive international experience in diplomatic, cultural and media structures — from the Swiss Embassy in Tashkent to the Goethe-Institut and major German media. DAAD scholarship holder. Producer at the Berlin International Film Festival. The entire FMP theoretical corpus — 370+ artifacts, 23 DOI publications, 12+ GitHub repositories — was created under zero-budget conditions and extremely limited resource access.
FMP is built on four conceptual pillars: NULLO (zero-point ontology), PLT (Post-Lingua Trace — semantic trace beyond language), UCOM (Universal Communication Protocol) and EUO (Emergent Universal Organization). Each component is developed as an independent theoretical unit with its own mathematical apparatus and verified through international academic platforms.
Abdukarimov's works have been accepted by three independent Zenodo communities (Big Fractal, Fractal Cosmos, Syntheverse) by independent curators. Two publications are indexed in Clarivate Web of Science, one in DataCite. The academic profile is verified through ORCID, Web of Science, Zenodo and SSRN eLibrary.
The central methodological principle of FMP is what Abdukarimov calls "zero ontology" (Zero-Budget Ontology, NULLO): conceptual rigor and verifiability can be achieved without institutional resources, provided systematic thinking and honesty about constraints. All Technology Readiness Levels in FMP publications are stated precisely — without the exaggerations typical of the academic marketplace.
The work on the Navoi Digital Monument, timed to Alisher Navoi's birthday (February 9), demonstrates the practical application of PLT methodology to classical literary heritage: 15th-century Chagatai poetry is processed as a multi-level semantic system with 9-language annotations, opening new possibilities for comparative digital humanities.