Complexity Digest 2002.14
08-Apr-2002
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Content
- Icy Birth? Amino Acids Form In Simulations Of Space Ice, Science News
- Astrobiology: Seeds Of Life?, Nature
- Amino Acids From Ultraviolet Irradiation Of Interstellar Ice Analogues, Nature
- Can Good Genes Explain The Peacock's Tail?, Trends in Ecology & Evolution
- All People Who On Earth Do Dwell, Trends in Ecology & Evolution
- Inbreeding Effects In Wild Populations, Trends in Ecology & Evolution
- Does Complexity Constrain Organelle Evolution?, Trends in Plant Science
- Bright Idea: Protein Relocation Helps Eyes Adapt To Light, Science News
- Chaos In Learning A Simple Two-Person Game, PNAS
- Social Intelligence, Innovation, And Enhanced Brain Size In Primates, PNAS
- Wild Chimps Rocked On: Apes Left Unique Record Of Stone Tools
- Nephews, Cousins . . . Who Cares? Detecting Kin Doesn't Mean Favoring Them, Science News
- Neuroimaging: The Sight Of Two Brains Talking, Nature
- Neuroscience: Moving Through The Landscape, Science
- Hominid Economics, Nature Book Report
- A Dim View Of A `Posthuman Future', NYTimes
- Seeing Around Corners, The Atlantic Monthly
- The Science of Surprise, Discover
- Universal Laws In Application To Evolutionary Economics, Nonlin. Dyn., Psycho., Life Sc.
- Creating Health In A Capricious World: The Role Of Chaos And Complexity, UK Nonlinear News
- Theory Of Complex Systems And Economic Dynamics, Nonlin. Dyn., Psycho., Life Sc.
- The Complexity Of Collective Decision, Nonlin. Dyn., Psycho., Life Sc
- Forbidden Information, arXiv
- Graphical Information: Charting the Virtual World, Darwin Magazine
- The Structure Of Broad Topics On The Web, arXiv
- Customer Friendly IM (Instant Messaging), Darwin Magazine
- Toward Self-Organization and Complex Matter, Science
- Nanotubes Self-Assemble Into Circuit Elements, EE Times
- Conflicts Of Interest: Can You Believe What You Read?, Nature
- Dispute Arises Over a Push to Change Climate Panel, NYTimes
- Deciphering Contradictory Antarctic Climate Patterns, NYTimes
- Complex Challenges: Global Terrorist Networks
- Airport Security: Terminal Evacuations Put People at Risk, NPR
- U.S. Fears Afghan Farmers Can't End Cash Crop: Opium, NYTimes
- Qaeda and Taliban May Ply Pakistan's Porous Frontier, NYTimes
- Links & Snippets
- Santa Fe Institute Working Papers
- Other Papers
- Webcast Announcements
- Conference Announcements
Icy Birth? Amino Acids Form In Simulations Of Space Ice, Science News
Excerpts: In another step toward understanding the origin
of Earth's biological molecules, two independent laboratory experiments have
produced amino acids-the building blocks of proteins-by simulating conditions
in icy, interstellar space.
The results, (...), suggest that some amino acids could have formed in giant
clouds of icy particles and then hitched rides on comets and asteroids to
planets throughout the universe, (...)
These studies may help explain how some amino acids formed initially, but
they do not indicate why life incorporates only left-handed amino acids.
Astrobiology: Seeds Of Life?, Nature
Excerpt: Amino acids, a basic constituent of life,
can form in dust grains that are similar to those found in the space between
stars.
Organic compounds in meteorites and interplanetary dust particles are
thought by some to hold the key to the origin of life. Increasingly,
investigations are revealing a complex history of chemical processes in the
Solar System - processes by which the chemicals that are the basis of life may
have been synthesized from the gas and dust that make up the interstellar
medium.
Amino Acids From Ultraviolet Irradiation Of Interstellar Ice Analogues, Nature
Excerpt: Amino acids are the essential
molecular components of living organisms on Earth, but the proposed mechanisms
for their spontaneous generation have been unable to account for their
presence in Earth's early history. The delivery of extraterrestrial organic
compounds has been proposed as an alternative to generation on Earth, and some
amino acids have been found in several meteorites. Here we report the
detection of amino acids in the room-temperature residue of an interstellar
ice analogue that was ultraviolet-irradiated in a high vacuum at 12 K.
- Amino Acids From Ultraviolet Irradiation Of Interstellar
Ice Analogues, Gm Munoz Caro, Uj
Meierhenrich, Wa Schutte, B Barbier, A Arcones, Segovia, H Rosenbauer,
Whp Thiemann, A Brack, Jm Greenberg
-
Excerpt: Whether the choice for good genes can drive both
the evolution of elaborate displays in one sex (usually males) and the
preference for them in the other (usually females) has remained controversial
since Zahavi proposed the good-genes handicap model. First, female preference
should deplete genetic variance in the population, eliminating the benefit to
the preference. Second, the potential benefit could be counteracted easily by
natural selection if there was a cost to the female preference. In a new
paper, Houle and Kondrashov develop a model of good-genes choice that reveals
the conditions required for the coevolution of costly mate choice and
exaggerated displays.
-
Excerpt: Explaining the latitudinal gradient in
species richness is one of the fundamental challenges in ecology, and one that
we have yet to fully meet. Several potential causal factors for this
phenomenon have been invoked, including topographical heterogeneity,
environmental stability, parasitism, time since major disturbance, and
productivity. Elizabeth Cashdan [1] adds a new twist to this debate by
elucidating another latitudinal pattern that applies to a single species -
namely, the decrease in human ethnic diversity as we move from the equatorial
regions to the poles.
-
Excerpts: Whether inbreeding affects the demography
and persistence of natural populations has been questioned. (...) This work
reveals that levels of inbreeding depression vary across taxa, populations and
environments, but are usually substantial enough to affect both individual and
population performance. Data from bird and mammal populations suggest that
inbreeding depression often significantly affects birth weight, survival,
reproduction and resistance to disease, predation and environmental stress.
(...) Thus, it might be necessary to retain gene flow among increasingly
fragmented habitat patches to sustain populations that are sensitive to
inbreeding.
Does Complexity Constrain Organelle Evolution?, Trends in Plant Science
Abstract: The evolution of eukaryotes was punctuated by
invasions of the bacteria that have evolved to mitochondria and plastids.
These bacterial endosymbionts founded major eukaryotic lineages by enabling
them to carry out aerobic respiration and oxygenic photosynthesis. Yet, having
evolved as free-living organisms, they were at first poorly adapted
organelles. Although mitochondria and plastids have integrated within the
physiology of eukaryotic cells, this integration has probably been constrained
by the high level of complexity of their bacterial ancestors and the inability
of gradual evolutionary processes to drastically alter complex systems. Here,
I review complex processes that directly involve translation of plastid mRNAs
and how they could constrain transfer to the nucleus of the genes encoding
them.
Bright Idea: Protein Relocation Helps Eyes Adapt To Light, Science News
Excerpt: Animals appear to adapt to bright light by
reducing their use of proteins involved in the eye's light-detecting systems.
Chaos In Learning A Simple Two-Person Game, PNAS
Abstract: We investigate the problem of learning to play
the game of rock-paper-scissors. Each player attempts to improve her/his
average score by adjusting the frequency of the three possible responses,
using reinforcement learning. For the zero sum game the learning process
displays Hamiltonian chaos. Thus, the learning trajectory can be simple or
complex, depending on initial conditions. We also investigate the non-zero sum
case and show that it can give rise to chaotic transients. This is, to our
knowledge, the first demonstration of Hamiltonian chaos in learning a basic
two-person game, extending earlier findings of chaotic attractors in
dissipative systems. As we argue here, chaos provides an important
self-consistency condition for determining when players will learn to behave
as though they were fully rational. That chaos can occur in learning a simple
game indicates one should use caution in assuming real people will learn to
play a game according to a Nash equilibrium strategy.
Social Intelligence, Innovation, And Enhanced Brain Size In Primates, PNAS
Excerpts: Despite considerable current interest in the
evolution of intelligence, the intuitively appealing notion that brain volume
and "intelligence" are linked remains untested. Here, we use ecologically
relevant measures of cognitive ability, the reported incidence of behavioral
innovation, social learning, and tool use, to show that brain size and
cognitive capacity are indeed correlated. (...) These findings provide an
empirical link between behavioral innovation, social learning capacities, and
brain size in mammals. The ability to learn from others, invent new behaviors,
and use tools may have played pivotal roles in primate brain evolution.
Wild Chimps Rocked On: Apes Left Unique Record Of Stone Tools
Excerpts: Archaeologists,
by definition, uncover the remnants of past human activity. With the first
excavation of chimpanzee stone tools at an African site, however, the scope of
their work has entered virgin terrain.
Chimps transported suitable pieces of stone to the undated site and used
them to crack open nuts placed on thick tree roots (...).
"At least some wild chimpanzees have produced stone [artifacts] and left
behind an archaeological record of their nut-cracking behavior," says
Mercader, who directed the excavation.
Nephews, Cousins . . . Who Cares? Detecting Kin Doesn't Mean Favoring Them, Science News
, Science News, Week of
March 30, 2002; Vol. 161, No. 13, Audible
Neuroimaging: The Sight Of Two Brains Talking, Nature
Excerpts: By simultaneously scanning the brains of
contestants playing a simple game, researchers aim to study how social
interactions affect brain activity. Steve Nadis meets the scientists who think
two heads are better than one. (...)
This summer, those researchers will take a step towards answering that
question. Two subjects - one in Atlanta, the other in New Jersey - will play a
strategic game over the Internet, while having their brains scanned. The team
calls the technique 'hyperscanning'. "Virtually everything we do in real life
is motivated by interactions with others,"
Neuroscience: Moving Through The Landscape, Science
Excerpts: When we move through
the environment, the image falling on our retina expands, although we rarely
notice this. The expanding image has a point of origin, or focus, from which
all image motion seems to radiate. The focus,(...), corresponds to our direction
of heading. Neurons in a region of the brain called MST [medial superior
temporal, Ed.] are responsible for encoding information about heading, path,
and place, which is combined with visual cortex inputs to provide perception
of heading during self-movement.
Excerpts: (...) explain why the hominid lineage took
the evolutionary direction that led to Homo sapiens. First, what was the
initial triggering event? (...)
Second, what caused the approximately simultaneous appearance, about two
million years ago, of larger brains, more sensitive hands, stone tools and the
ability to travel across entire continents? Third, what triggered the Great
Leap Forward that led to representational art and sophisticated tools? (...) And
finally, what was the cause of the agricultural revolution that started around
10,000 years ago (...)
A Dim View Of A `Posthuman Future', NYTimes
Excerpts: If the human mind and body are shaped by a
bunch of genes, (...), then biotechnologists will one day be able to change both
and perhaps, in seeking to refine the imperfect human clay, will alter human
nature. (...)
By messing with the human genome in order to enhance intelligence or
physique or other desirable qualities, biotechnology may cause us "to lose our
humanity (...)
History may have ended, but it seems that special measures are needed to
keep it in a state of finality.
Excerpts: The new science of artificial societies
suggests that real ones are both more predictable and more surprising than we
thought. Growing long-vanished civilizations and modern-day genocides on
computers will probably never enable us to foresee the future in detail-but we
might learn to anticipate the kinds of events that lie ahead, and where to
look for interventions that might work (...).
(...) Rob Axtell mentioned that he had created artificial companies and
cities, and that the companies and cities both followed Zipf's Law.
The Science of Surprise, Discover
Excerpts: Complexity
theory researchers have created many different computer simulators in the last
decade in an attempt to find simple rules underlying the normally
unpredictable behavior of intricate systems, including those made up of cells,
people, and corporations. (...) Stuart Kauffman, a molecular biologist and
complexity theory expert, even built a computer model that simulates how
molecules in Earth's primordial soup may have self-organized into living cells
billions of years ago. (...) The company uses complexity theory analysis to
tackle such tangible problems as how to control crowds at an amusement park or
how to decrease the amount of time it takes a manufacturer to get its products
into neighborhood stores.
Abstract: The purpose of the present paper is to reveal
some conformities to natural universal laws allowing to advance the theory of
evolutionary economics. From the point of view of statistical physics, entropy
is applied as universal function of a condition for economic systems. The
concept of parametric economic space is introduced. The concepts of energy and
number of degrees of freedom of a dynamical economic system allow
substantiated cause and effect connections between the evolution of the system
and a number of economic factors (forces), influencing on the system (degree
of an openness, ¡ˇ±freedom¡¨ of an economic system).
Creating Health In A Capricious World: The Role Of Chaos And Complexity, UK Nonlinear News
Press Release: Toronto cardiologist, Dr VS Rambihar will
deliver a lecture on "Creating Health in a Capricious World: the role of chaos
and complexity" at the Caribbean Cardiac Society Conference in Port of Spain,
Trinidad, in July 2002. This will introduce ideas from his books "Chaos 2000:
Making a New Medicine for a New Millennium" and "A New Chaos Based Medicine
beyond 2000: the response to evidence."
>He has been promoting the concept
that much of the ideas that now emerge in the increasing discussion and
literature on going beyond evidence or beyond evidence based medicine are
derivable from chaos and complexity theory, and that this subject should be
explored in medicine and health. He has also used these ideas in discussing
the complex dynamic interactions of genes and the environment in producing
health and disease, proposing that this novel approach may be useful in
creating change.
>He will mention this in a talk at a cardiology conference
in Martinique in February 2002, using the imagery of fractals to describe the
complex dynamic interactions of culture, customs, genes and the environment in
leading to high rates of heart disease in the South Asian diaspora. The
imagery of fractals will also be invoked to describe the time and space
pattern of heart disease in this diaspora and the implications for creating
change, ideas discussed in a 1996 book (...).
Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to discuss the
significance of the theory of complex systems for analyzing economic
evolution. We emphasize the necessity of the structural dynamic approach and
discuss possible implications of the theory of complex systems for studying
economic processes with different speeds of change. We illustrate a way to
construct a general economic theory that includes the main economic theories
of competition with government intervention as special cases in the structural
sense.
Abstract: This paper is about the dynamics of collective
decision when an individual adapts his rational decision to the others'. We
consider an organization of heterogeneous agents, in which each agent faces
the binary decision problem. The standard way (...) is to assume everyone has
the same value or payoff structure. This paper considers collective decision
of agents with heterogeneous payoffs. We obtain and classify rational decision
rules of heterogeneous agents into a few categories depending on their
idiosyncratic payoff structure. We show that agents' rational behavior
combined with the others produce stable orders, and sometimes complex cyclic
behavior.
Forbidden Information, arXiv
Abstract: There appears to be a gap between the usual
interpretation of Godel Theorem and what is actually proven. Closing this gap
does not seem obvious and involves complexity theory. This is unrelated to
complexity quantifications of the usual effects of Godel theorem, which were
well studied before. Similar problems and solutions apply to other
unsolvability results, such as non-recursive tilings, etc.
Graphical Information: Charting the Virtual World, Darwin Magazine
Excerpts: Some of the more far-out looking maps are
confusing, even intimidating.
You're referring to images created by a process called spatialization,
where researchers impose a spatial, maplike structure onto data, even if the
data has no such inherent structure, or the structure isn't obvious. The aim
of two-dimensional and three-dimensional spatializations is to produce more
legible and intelligible views of data-more intelligible than a big, long
spreadsheet of thousands of numbers, or a big, long textual report.
Yet a lot of the current examples don't really work. They're glorious
failures-just eye candy.
The Structure Of Broad Topics On The Web, arXiv
Abstract: The Web graph is a giant social network
whose properties have been measured and modeled extensively in recent years.
Most such studies concentrate on the graph structure alone, and do not
consider textual properties of the nodes. Consequently, Web communities have
been characterized purely in terms of graph structure and not on page content.
We propose that a topic taxonomy such as Yahoo! or the Open Directory provides
a useful framework for understanding the structure of content-based clusters
and communities. In particular, using a topic taxonomy and an automatic
classifier, we can measure the background distribution of broad topics on the
Web, and analyze the capability of recent random walk algorithms to draw
samples which follow such distributions. In addition, we can measure the
probability that a page about one broad topic will link to another broad
topic. Extending this experiment, we can measure how quickly topic context is
lost while walking randomly on the Web graph. Estimates of this topic mixing
distance may explain why a global PageRank is still meaningful in the context
of broad queries. In general, our measurements may prove valuable in the
design of community-specific crawlers and link-based ranking systems.
Contributing Editor's Note: The design and use of ontologies for
building a Semantic
Web should provide also an increment in the quality and performance of
crawlers and search engines.
Customer Friendly IM (Instant Messaging), Darwin Magazine
Excerpts: Enable your phone reps to skip the
no-brainers and handle more complex questions. New technology is the
answer.
You've heard this all before, but it's coming around again. Instant
messaging (IM) software, recently discussed in this column as a tool for
interemployee communication (...) is also opening up a new channel for serving
customers. But is there any payoff?
(...) IM has begun earning its stripes as a productivity tool in many
corporations.
(...)IM as a superior way to communicate with customers-either to market new
offerings or to answer their questions.
Toward Self-Organization and Complex Matter, Science
Excerpts: Beyond molecular chemistry based on the
covalent bond, supramolecular chemistry aims at developing highly complex
chemical systems from components interacting through noncovalent
intermolecular forces. Over the past quarter century, supramolecular chemistry
has grown into a major field and has fueled numerous developments at the
interfaces with biology and physics. (...)
Noncovalent interactions play critical roles in the biological world. Thus,
with just a few building blocks, strands of nucleic acids allow huge amounts
of information to be stored, retrieved, and processed via weak hydrogen
bonds.
Nanotubes Self-Assemble Into Circuit Elements, EE Times
Excerpts: The devices are called rosette nanotubes
by Fenniri, who has applied to patent them as a new class of self-assembling
organic structures. Their shape permits a hollow central interior channel that
runs the length of the nanotube with tunable inner and outer diameters. On the
outside, smaller hollow channels are custom-tailored to the given application.
(...)
"We have designed a system that can be synthesized and modified almost at
will. It is similar to biological systems. Our nanotubes are produced by a
process of self-organization and self-assembly," said Fenniri.
Conflicts Of Interest: Can You Believe What You Read?, Nature
Excerpts: As the links between commerce and academia
deepen, how to deal with the conflicts of interest that inevitably arise has
become an increasingly important issue. (...) researchers, entrepreneurs and
others will meet to debate the 'Commercialization of the Academy'; meanwhile,
Warsaw in Poland will host an international conference on conflicts of
interest in science and medicine. (...)
Concerns about commercial conflicts have been most acute in clinical
medicine - where human lives may be at stake. Medical journals have led the
way in introducing editorial policies to deal with conflicting interests.
Dispute Arises Over a Push to Change Climate Panel, NYTimes
Excerpt: After a year of
urging from energy industry lobbyists, the Bush administration is seeking the
ouster of an American scientist who for nearly six years has directed an
international panel of hundreds of experts assessing global warming, several
government officials have said.
The specialist, Dr. Robert T. Watson, chief scientist of the World Bank, is
highly regarded as an atmospheric chemist by many climate experts. He has held
the unpaid position of chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change since the fall of 1996.
Deciphering Contradictory Antarctic Climate Patterns, NYTimes
Excerpts: Antarctica is
experiencing some of the fastest warming in the world. Antarctica is
cooling.
Some of its glaciers are thinning. Some are thickening. Ice shelves are
disappearing. More sea ice is forming.
Scientists have reported all this in recent months. It may all be true,
even the contradictory parts. (...)
Antarctica's role in climate and the oceans is largely a story of ice.
Ninety percent of the world's ice lies either on the continent, in ice sheets
that are on average 1.3 miles thick, (...).
Complex Challenges: Global Terrorist Networks
Excerpts: Officials struggle to control incidents that
prompt a spate of airport evacuations. Security specialists say the
evacuations themselves can invite terrorist attacks. NPR's Mary Ann Akers
reports on All Things Considered. March 28, 2002.
Airport Security: Terminal Evacuations Put People at Risk, NPR
Excerpts: American
officials have quietly abandoned their hopes to reduce Afghanistan's opium
production substantially this year and are now bracing for a harvest large
enough to inundate the world's heroin and opium markets with cheap drugs.
(...)
Until leaders of the Taliban banned opium in their last year in power,
Afghanistan produced as much as three-fourths of the world's supply, (...). Now,
the profits that flowed to the Taliban's allies are expected to enrich tribal
leaders whose support is vital to the American-backed government.
U.S. Fears Afghan Farmers Can't End Cash Crop: Opium, NYTimes
Excerpts: From sunrise to dusk, people cross the
imaginary line that cuts through the mountains here: nomads with camels,
smugglers with wares, young men with guns.
The Afghan border guards, recently hired by the Americans to look for
terrorist suspects, give a lazy wave. Pakistani guards are nowhere to be
seen.
Qaeda and Taliban May Ply Pakistan's Porous Frontier, NYTimes
An American reporter and photographer crossed the border into an area where
foreigners have largely been banned by the Pakistani government. There were no
Pakistanis on the border to question them.
Links & Snippets
Santa Fe Institute Working Papers
- Discovering
Planar Disorder in Close-Packed Structures from X-Ray Diffraction: Beyond
the Fault Model , Dowman P. Varn, Geoffrey S. Canright, and James P.
Crutchfield, SFI WP 02-03-014
- Network
Topology and Species Loss in Food Webs: Robustness Increases with
Connectance, Jennifer A. Dunne, Richard J. Williams, and Neo D.
Martinez, SFI WP 02-03-013
- Stochastic
Pairwise Alignments Stadler, Ulrike Mückstein, Ivo L. Hofacker, and
Peter F., SFI WP 02-03-012
- Artificial
Societies and the Social Sciences , J. Stephen Lansing, SFI WP
02-03-011
- Small
Networks but not Small Worlds: Unique Aspects of Food Web Structure
, Jennifer A. Dunne, Richard J. Williams, and Neo D. Martinez, SFI
WP 02-03-010
Other Papers
- What Are Big Brains
For?, Robert M. Seyfarth and Dorothy L. Cheney, Proc. Natl. Acad.
Sci. USA 2002 April 2; 99(7): p. 4141-4142
- Combinatorial
Biosynthesis Of Antibiotics: Challenges And Opportunities, Walsh
CT., Chembiochem. 2002 Mar 1;3(2-3):124-34.
- The
Effects Of Jury Size, Evidence Complexity, And Note Taking On Jury Process
And Performance In A Civil Trial, Horowitz IA, Bordens KS., J Appl
Psychol. 2002 Feb;87(1):121-30.
- Analytical
Estimation of Scaling Behavior for the Entanglement Complexity of a Bond
Network, Arteca GA., J Chem Inf Comput Sci. 2002 Mar
25;42(2):326-330.
- Second
Moment Of The Husimi Distribution As A Measure Of Complexity Of Quantum
States, Sugita A, Aiba H., Phys Rev E Stat Phys Plasmas Fluids Relat
Interdiscip Topics. 2002 Mar;65(3-2):036205.
- Study Finds Link
Between TV Violence, Youth Behavior, NPR Audio, A new study in
Science magazine finds that exposure to television violence during childhood
leads to aggressive behavior in young adults. NPR's Rachel Jones reports for
Morning Edition. March 29, 2002.
- Health: A
Study Finds More Links Between TV and Violence
- Fending Off
Sharks with an Electronic Shield, An Australian firm develops an
electronic shark repellent that creates a force field around a swimmer. It's
lighter than pods used now. All Things Considered host Liane Hansen talks to
Michael Wescombe-Down of SeaChange Technology. March 29, 2002.
- Lemonade From
Broken Amber, Science News, Week of March 30, 2002; Vol. 161, No.
13, Audible, The
fossilized microbes found inside termites that have been encased in amber
for 20 million years are remarkably similar to those found within the
ancient insects' modern cousins.
- Extreme genome
reduction in Buchnera spp.: Toward The Minimal Genome Needed For Symbiotic
Life, Rosario Gil, Beatriz Sabater-Munoz, Amparo Latorre, Francisco
J. Silva, Andres Moya, PNAS 2002;99 4454-4458
- Sexual
Selection Driving Diversification In Jumping Spiders, Susan E.
Masta, Wayne P. Maddison, PNAS 2002;99 4442-4447
- Nitrogen
Availability Alters The Expression Of Carnivory In The Northern Pitcher
Plant, Sarraceniapurpurea, Aaron M. Ellison, Nicholas J. Gotelli,
PNAS 2002;99 4409-4412
- What Are Big Brains
For?, Robert M. Seyfarth, Dorothy L. Cheney, PNAS 2002;99 4141-4142
- Leonardo
Da Vinci's Contributions To Neuroscience, J. Pevsner, Trends in
Neurosciences, 25, 4, pp:217-220, April,2002
- Supplementary
materials on Leonardo da Vinci's Contributions to Neuroscience
- Towards
A Macroscopic Modeling Of The Complexity In Traffic Flow, Phys Rev
E, Rosswog S, Wagner P, Phys Rev E Stat Phys Plasmas Fluids Relat
Interdiscip Topics. 2002 Mar;65(3-2):036106.
- Spinning
Eggs --- A Paradox Resolved, H K Moffatt, Y Shimomura, Nature
- Psilocybin
And Schizophrenia Bring On The Voices, A. O. Scott, NYTimes Movies,
02/04/03
- Simulation
Of The Ice Nucleation And Growth Process Leading To Water Freezing,
M Matsumoto, S Saito, I Ohmine, Nature
- Snow
Job All In A Day's Work For Physicist, The Associated Press/CNN
- Levels
Of Complexity In Phonological Disorders: Evidence From Cantonese,
Stokes SF., Clin Linguist Phon. 2002 Jan-Feb;16(1):35-57
- Spike-Timing-Dependent
Synaptic Modification Induced By Natural Spike Trains, Robert C.
Froemke, Yang Dan, Nature 416, 433 - 438 (2002)
- Agent Trade Servers In
Financial Exchange Systems , David Lyback and Magnus Boman, arXiv Paper ID: cs.CE/0203023
- Modeling
The Development Of Lexicon With A Growing Self-Organizing Map ,
Farkas, Igor and Li, Ping, CogPrints, 2002
- Fixing
Unsaid Meanings , Rodrigo Agerri, Trends in Cognitive Sciences Volume 6,
Issue 4, April 2002, pp. 149-150
- Family
Wants Data Chips Implanted, A. Sainz, Associated Press, April 1,
2002
- An
Overview Of Decoding Techniques For Large Vocabulary Continuous Speech
Recognition, X..L. Aubert, Computer Speech & Language,
vol. 16, no. 1, pp. 89-114(26), January 2002
Webcast Announcements
- 2002 Complex
Systems Lecture Series, University of
Alaska Anchorage
- Computation Of Chaos, Complexity, And Computability With
Applications To Real World Problems, Julian
Palmore, 02/04/05 (21:30GMT)
- The Particle Swarm Algorithm: Discoveries, Investigations, And New
Frontiers, James Kennedy, 02/04/12
(19:00GMT)
- The Adaptive
Enterprise in Action, The Center for Business Innovation,
online until June 2002
- Center
for Preventive Action Special Event, Kofi Annan, John W. Vessey,
Webcast, 02/03/06
Conference Announcements
A NAME=20.4>
-
- AIS'2002: Towards
Component-Based Modeling and Simulation, Lisbon, Portugal,
02/04/07-10
- Manufacturing
Complexity Network Conference, Cambridge, UK, 02/04/09-10
- Modeling &
Simulation of Microsystems (MSM 2002) & Intl. Conf on Comp Nano Science
(ICCN 2002), San Juan, Puerto Rico, 02/04/22-25
- 'Introducing
Complexity', The University of Liverpool, 02/04/24
- International
Conference Ethics and Technological Complexity, Louvain-la-Neuve,
02/05/29-31
- PROTECTING
THE HOMELAND: Lessons Learned and Policy Implications of 9/11,
Washington, DC, 02/04/29-05/01
- World Conference NL
2002 - Networked Learning in a Global Environment: Challenges and Solutions
for Virtual Education, Berlin, Germany, 02/05/01-04
- Electronic
Conference on Foundations of Information Science: The Nature Of
Information: Conceptions, Misconceptions, And Paradoxes, 02/05/06
- Managing
Complex Organizations In A Complex World, Cambridge, MA, 02/05/09-10
- Mass Customisation:
Strategies and Enabling Technology, U. Warwick, UK,
02/05/14-15
- International
Conference on Complex Systems (ICCS2002), Nashua, NH, 02/06/9-14
- Sitges Conference
"Statistical Mechanics of Complex Networks", Sitges, Spain,
02/06/10-14
- Complex
Systems: Control and Modeling Problems, Samara, Russia, 02/06/17
- International Conference
SocioPhysics, ZIF - Bielefeld, Germany, 02/06/06-09
- 2nd International
Conference on Development and Learning (ICDL'02), Cambridge,
Massachusetts USA, 02/06/12-15
- International Conference:
Emergence in Chemical Systems, University of Alaska Anchorage,
02/06/20-23
- Let's Face Chaos
Through Nonlinear Dynamics, Maribor, Slovenia, 02/06/30 - 07/14
- 7th International
Conference on Music Perception & Cognition - ICMPC7, Sydney,
02/07/17-21
- Complexity and
Philosophy, Norwood, Massachusetts, USA, 02/07/29-30
- 12th
Ann Intl Conf Society For Chaos Theory in Psychology & Life Sciences:
Chaos and Complexity in a Changing World, Portland, OR, USA,
02/08/01-04
- Self-Organisation
and Evolution of Social Behaviour, Monte Verità, Switzerland,
02/09/08-13
- Complex Systems
(CS02) Complexity with Agent-Based Modeling, Chuo University, Tokyo,
Japan, 02/09/10-12
- 3rd
Intl NAISO Symposium on Engineering Of Intelligent Systems (EIS
20020), Malaga, Spain, 02/09/24-27
- Seminar on
Non-equilibrium Phenomena and Phase Transitions in Complex Systems,
Avila, Spain, 02/09/24-28.
- ACRI 2002,
5th Intl Conf on Cellular Automata for Research and
Industry, Geneva, Switzerland, 02/10/09-11
- 4th
Asia-Pacific Conference on Simulated Evolution And Learning (SEAL'02),
9th International Conference on Neural Information Processing
(ICONIP'02), International Conference on Fuzzy Systems and Knowledge
Discovery (FSKD'02), Singapore, 02/11/18-22
- Managing the
Complex IV, Naples , FL, Early December 2002
- Artificial Life
VIII, UNSW, Sydney, Australia, 02/12/09-13
- Hawaii
International Conference On System Sciences (HICSS-36), Big Island,
Hawaii, 03/01/06-09
- 21st ICDE World
Conference on Open Learning and Distance Education, Hong Kong,
03/06/01-05
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