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  1. News and Events
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    1. EVENT RECORDINGS
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EVENT RECORDINGS

  1. News and Events
  2. All News
  3. All Events
    1. EVENT RECORDINGS
    2. Annual Events
    3. Events - Previous 12 Months - and back to May 2016
    4. Events - April 2016 & Older
    5. POSTERS!
    6. IGERT Reunion Conference

 

Please visit our VIDEO CHANNEL to find all of our recordings, organized into playlists - or click on the events below to go directly to that recording on our video channel. 

+ Andrew Stier | What does Urban Psychology tell us about implicit biases? | March 20, 2025

 

+ Tzer Han Tan | Nonreciprocal dynamics in living and robotic matter | February 27, 2025


+ Carl Simon
| An allele-based evolution model of the population spread of SARS-CoV-2 | April 30, 2024
 

+ Todd Gingrich | Tensor Networks for Chemical Reaction Network Rate Calculations | April 23, 2024
 

+ David Sabin-Miller | Diagnostic Perspectives and Reality-Seeking Dynamical Modeling of the US Political Ecosystem | April 18, 2024 
 

+ Suraj Shankar | Controlling active matter - from drops to defects | April 2, 2024
 

+ Xiaofan Liang | Beyond Nodes and Edges: Integrating Spatial Contexts into Urban Network Science | March 26, 2024
 

+ Massimiliano Esposito | Nonequilibrium Thermodynamics of Complex Systems | March 1, 2024
 

+ Brennan Klein | A Network Science for Complexity & Society | February 15, 2024
 

+ Elizabeth Munch | Topological Data Analysis for Shape Comparison | February 8, 2024
 

+ Yuanzhao Zhang | Twists, triangles, and tentacles: A guided tour of high-dimensional basins in networked dynamical systems | February 1, 2024
 

+ Stefani Crabtree | Thinking Through Archaeological Complexity: Leveraging high performance computing, network science, and agent-based models to understand Australia’s deep past | January 30, 2024
 

+ Elizabeth Hobson | Leveraging behavioral interactions to identify aspects of social and cognitive complexity in animals | January 25, 2024
 

+ Sanjukta Krishnagopal | Methods in networks and machine learning: from hate speech to personalized predictive medicine | January 11, 2024
 

+ Indika Rajapakse | The Turing System Indomitable  | November 7, 2023 
 

+ Fernanda Valdovinos | Evaluating responses of ecological networks to environmental change. | October 19, 2023

Mark Newman | Leaders and Best: Networks and Ranking in Sports, Markets, and Society | September 5, 2023

Mark Newman

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents: "Leaders and Best: Networks and Ranking in Sports, Markets, and Society" <---(Click to View Seminar - includes abstract)

Mark Newman | Department of Physics, Complex Systems | University of Michigan

Date of Seminar: September 5, 2023

Abstract: One of the oldest of network problems is the ranking of individuals, teams, or commodities on the basis of pairwise comparisons between them. For example, if you know which football teams beat which others in a particular year, can you say which team is the best overall? This is a harder problem than it sounds because not all pairs of teams play games in a given season, and also because the outcomes of the games can be ambiguous or contradictory...FOR FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING CLICK HERE

 

Xiaoming Mao | Geometric frustration, self-assembly, mechanics, and pathways to complexity | April 11, 2023

Xiaoming Mao

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents: "Geometric frustration, self-assembly, mechanics, and pathways to complexity"  <---(Click to View Seminar - includes abstract)

Xiaoming Mao, Department of Physics, University of Michigan

Date of Seminar:  April 11, 2023

ABSTRACT: Self-organized complex structures in nature, from hierarchical biopolymers to viral capsids and organisms, offer efficiency, adaptability, robustness, and multifunctionality. How are these structures assembled? Can we understand the fundamental principles behind their formation, and assemble similar structures and can we utilize similar mechanisms to program new ... FOR FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING CLICK HERE

 

A. Feder Cooper | Can Governance be Reconciled with Uncertainty in Machine Learning? Challenges and Opportunities concerning Accountability and Variance | March 23, 2023

A. Feder Cooper

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents: "Can Governance be Reconciled with Uncertainty in Machine Learning? Challenges and Opportunities concerning Accountability and Variance" <---(Click to View Seminar - includes abstract) 

A. Feder Cooper | PhD Candidate Computer Science | Cornell University

Date of Seminar:  March 23, 2023

ABSTRACT: Artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) researchers are confronted daily with the reality that our field has become a stand-in in popular discourse for a variety of public anxieties, political debates, and metaphysical questions about human nature and intelligence. Among such weighty topics .... FOR FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING CLICK HERE

 

Michael Hinczewski | Controlling stochastic biophysical processes, from protein folding to evolution | March 14, 2023

Michael Hinczewski

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents: "Controlling stochastic biophysical processes, from protein folding to evolution" <---(Click to View Seminar - includes abstract) 

Michael Hinczewski | Department of Physics | Case Western Reserve University

Date of Seminar:  March 14, 2023

ABSTRACT: The chemical reaction networks that regulate living systems are all stochastic to varying degrees. The resulting randomness affects biological outcomes at multiple scales, from the probability that a single protein molecule successfully finds its folded state to the evolutionary trajectory of a population of cells. Understanding .... FOR FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING CLICK HERE

 

Robert Ziff | Percolation in an antagonistic model of two-species random sequential adsorption | February 14, 2023

Robert Ziff

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents: "Percolation in an antagonistic model of two-species random sequential adsorption" <---(Click to View Seminar - includes abstract) 

Robert Ziff | School of Engineering, Department of Chemical Engineering | University of Michigan

Date of Seminar:  February 14, 2023

ABSTRACT: An important paradigm in non-equilibrium physics is the Random Sequential Adsorption (RSA) problem, where objects adsorb on a surface randomly and one at at time, with the rule that if another object is there already such that an overlap would occur, the attempted adsorption is rejected. This leads to an ever-slowing filling of the surface until,..... FOR FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING CLICK HERE

 

Jané Kondev | Physics of cellular proportions | February 7, 2023

Jané Kondev

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents: "Physics of cellular proportions" <---(Click to View Seminar - includes abstract) 

Jané Kondev | School of Physics | Brandeis University

Date of Seminar:  February 7, 2023

ABSTRACT: Dr. Gulliver noticed 140 years ago that the size of the cell\'s nucleus is proportional to the size of the cell. In the intervening years, similar observations have been made about other, large structures that self-assemble in the cell. This raises a fascinating question:,..... FOR FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING CLICK HERE

 

Carl Bergstrom | The crisis of human collective decision-making in a social media world | January 31, 2023

Carl Bergstrom

Complex Systems Special Public Event: Carl Bergstrom presents “The crisis of human collective decision-making in a social media world” <--- CLICK TO WATCH TALK

Carl Bergstrom, Department of Biology, University of Washington

Presented: January 31, 2023 in Rackham Amphitheatre

ABSTRACT: We are a species of information foragers. Individually and collectively, we have evolved to scour our natural and social environments for useful information. Over the past twenty years, society has constructed an information pipeline, the so-called Internet 2.0, to satisfy and profit from our evolved desires for novel information and social connection. What happens when the scale of human communication is radically transformed in the span of a generation, and our mechanisms for creating collective understanding are upended? What happens when this entire process is not stewarded to promote the spread of accurate information, strengthen democracy, and advance human well-being—but rather is to a first approximation engineered by machine learning algorithms to get people to click on advertisements? ... CLICK HERE FOR ABSTRACT AND FULL EVENT LISTING

 

Complex Systems Annual Nobel Symposium 2022

For full event listing and speakers, click HERE.

Selected Recordings from the 2022 Nobel Symposium: 

Opening Remarks & PHYSICS  Marisa Eisenberg, Alex Burgers

CHEMISTRY  Joerg Lahann

PHYSIOLOGY or MEDICINE Jeff Kidd

ECONOMICS  John Leahy

LITERATURE  David Caron

Katie Koelle | SARS-CoV-2 invasion dynamics and disease development: insights from viral sequences | October 20, 2022

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents: "SARS-CoV-2 invasion dynamics and disease development: insights from viral sequences" (Click to View Video of Seminar) 

Katie Koelle | Microbiology and Molecular Genetics | Population Biology, Ecology and Evolution | Emory University

Date of Seminar:  October 20, 2022

ABSTRACT: The unfolding of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic led to tremendous sequencing efforts, with tens of millions of viral sequences now publicly available on platforms such as GISAID for quantitative analysis by researchers worldwide. These sequences can be informative of the timing of viral emergence in regions, patterns of geographic spread, epidemiological dynamics,..... FOR FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING CLICK HERE

Charlie Doering Memorial Symposium

Go to the full symposium playlist.

Full event listing and speaker information, CLICK HERE.

Event Date: May 26-27, 2022

Click links below to go directly to an individual video.

Intro by Marisa Eisenberg and talk by Jean-Luc Thiffeault

"The mathematics of burger flipping"

John Gibbon
"Merging the multi-fractal model of turbulence with the Navier-Stokes equations. "

Darryl Holm
"Deterministic and Stochastic Euler-Boussinesq Convection"

Ian Tobasco
"Staying Cool, Charlie’s Way"

Annette Ostling
"Coexistence of competing structure populations: delineating mechanisms of niche differentiation"

Sid Redner
"First-Passage Resetting and its Application to Optimization and to Wealth Sharing"

Len Sander
"Durotaxis: it ain’t necessarily so"

Nikola Petrov
"Stationary distributions and convergence rates for semistochastic processes"

_______________

Video Played at Charlie Doering Memorial Symposium during dinner celebration. Video was filmed by Charlie's friend Peter Crosman. 

 

Ümit Aslan | Promoting the use of agent-based modeling in scientific inquiry: a Learning Sciences approach | March 8, 2022

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents: "Promoting the use of agent-based modeling in scientific inquiry: a Learning Sciences approach" (Click to View Video of Seminar) 

Ümit Aslan - Learning Sciences, Northwestern University

Date of Seminar:  March 8, 2022

ABSTRACT: Agent-based modeling provides a powerful computational infrastructure to construct dynamic representations of scientific phenomena that can augment analytical models in unique and meaningful ways. However, although it is used extensively in the field of complex systems and embraced by social scientists, only a handful of researchers in natural sciences incorporate agent-based modeling components into their theoretical investigations. In this talk ... FOR FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING CLICK HERE

Complex Systems Annual Nobel Symposium 2021

For full event listing and speakers, CLICK HERE.

Watch the talks:

Physics Part I (Mark Newman)
Physics Part II  (Richard Rood)

Chemistry

Physiology or Medicine

Economics

Literature

Peace

Olivia Lucca Fraser | The Evolutionary Exploration of Emergent Execution: Genetic Programming and Weird Machines | December 7, 2021

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents: "The Evolutionary Exploration of Emergent Execution: Genetic Programming and Weird Machines" (Click to View)

Olivia Lucca Fraser - Special Circumstances (research consultancy)

Date of Seminar:  December 7, 2021

ABSTRACT: The process of exploiting or "hacking" a software vulnerability can, in many cases, be understood as the process of discovering and then programming what Halvar Flake has called a "weird machine" -- a spontaneous virtual machine that supervenes on the intended finite state machine that the vulnerable software in question implements. A weird machine has ... FOR FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING CLICK HERE

Mark Transtrum | Using Information Geometry to Find Simple Models of Complex Processes | November 9, 2021

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents: "Using Information Geometry to Find Simple Models of Complex Processes" (Click to View)

Mark Transtrum - Brigham Young University

Date of Seminar:  November 9, 2021

ABSTRACT: Effective theories play a fundamental role in how we reason about the world. Although real physical processes are very complicated, useful models abstract away the irrelevant degrees of freedom to give parsimonious representations. I use information geometry to construct simplified models for many types of complex systems, such as biology, neuroscience, statistical physics, and complex engineered systems. .......FOR FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING CLICK HERE

Vicky Chuqiao Yang | Dynamical system models for politics and voting | October 12, 2021

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents: "Dynamical system models for politics and voting" (Click to View)

Vicky Chuqiao Yang - The Santa Fe Institute

Date of Seminar:  October 12, 2021

ABSTRACT: The recent US political landscape brings many puzzling questions. For example, the two major parties have become increasingly polarized since the 1960s, while most voters maintained moderate policy positions. What can lead to the disconnect between the parties and the voters? Also, a sizable proportion, often the majority, of the voting population is uninformed about facts relevant to their voting decisions, such as policies proposed by the candidates. Can such a voting body deliver good collective decisions? In this talk, I give an overview of research projects that address these complex issues, which leverage dynamical-system models, empirical findings in psychology, and data analysis. .......FOR FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING CLICK HERE

Duncan Watts | The Effects of Task Complexity on Group Synergy | April 15, 2021

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents: "The Effects of Task Complexity on Group Synergy" (Click to View)

Duncan Watts - University of Pennsylvania:  Annenberg School of Communication and Wharton School of Business

Date of Seminar:  April 15, 2021

Abstract:  Complexity—defined in terms of the number of components to a problem and the nature the inter-dependencies between them—is clearly a relevant feature of all tasks performed by groups. Yet the role that task complexity plays in determining group performance remains poorly understood, in part because no clear language exists to express it in a way that allows for straightforward comparisons across tasks.  ........FOR FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING CLICK HERE

Jon Zelner | Where models meet morality: What role should complexity science play in addressing racial and socioeconomic disparities in the COVID-19 crisis? | March 9, 2021

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents: "Where models meet morality: What role should complexity science play in addressing racial and socioeconomic disparities in the COVID-19 crisis?" (Click to view)

Jon Zelner, School of Public Health, University of Michigan

Date of Seminar: March 9, 2021

ABSTRACT: Socioeconomic and racial inequalities in infection and mortality have been key features of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States. While identifying these disparities is critical, it has also become clear that we lack the theoretical and methodological tools to integrate the mechanisms generating these inequities into models of infectious disease transmission ... FOR FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING CLICK HERE

James Koopman & Carl Simon | New data, models, and methods to guide SARS-CoV-2 vaccine design and vaccination programs that counter escape mutations | March 2, 2021

Complex Systems Seminar Presents "New data, models, and methods to guide SARS-CoV-2 vaccine design and vaccination programs that counter escape mutations" (Click to view)

James Koopman Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Michigan; Carl Simon, Complex Systems, Math, Public Policy, University of Michigan

Date of Seminar: March 2, 2021

Abstract: Before the emergence of escape mutants that now threaten pandemic control, we constructed and analyzed the first model integrating immune waning and escape mutations. In the model, escape mutants were not problematic until a year into the pandemic. After they emerged, vaccination could worsen the pandemic. We examined four patterns by which existing escape mutants ... SEE FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING HERE

Pavel Chykov | Low rattling: A predictive principle for self-organization in active collectives | February 23, 2021

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents:  "Low rattling: A predictive principle for self-organization in active collectives" (Click to view - Note: there is a slight delay before the audio begins)

Pavel Chvykov - Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Date of Seminar: February 23, 2021

ABSTRACT: In this work we suggest a mechanism for self-organization of active matter, which we believe may be quite general. This mechanism is similar....SEE FULL ABSTRACT AND EVENT LISTING HERE

Complex Systems Annual Nobel Symposium December 10, 2020

Complex Systems Annual Nobel Symposium December 10, 2020 - Listen to the talks:

Introduction and Chemistry Prize

Medicine Prize

Physics Prize

Economics

Literature Prize

Peace Prize

               Event listing and details of each talk.

Steven Strogatz | Searching for the densest network that does not always synchronize | November 17, 2020

 

 

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents "Searching for the densest network that does not always synchronize" <----To View Click Here

Steven Strogatz, Applied Mathematics, Cornell University

Date of Seminar: Tuesday, November 17, 2020

Abstract: Consider a network of identical phase oscillators with sinusoidal coupling. How likely are the oscillators to globally synchronize, starting from random initial phases? One expects dense networks to have a strong tendency to synchronize and the basin of attraction .... SEE FULL EVENT LISTING HERE

Carl P Simon | Choice of Fitness Function Matters. Which One Do Salmon Use? | Nov. 10 2020

 

Complex Systems Seminar Series Presents "Choice of Fitness Function Matters. Which One Do Salmon Use?"    <----To View Click Here

Carl P. Simon, Emeritus - UM Mathematics, Complex Systems and Ford School of Public Policy

Date of Seminar: Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Abstract: Life history theory focuses on characteristics of organisms, such as size and age at maturity or tradeoffs between egg number and egg size. It studies how such traits vary as evolutionary responses to natural selection that optimize fitness...SEE FULL EVENT LISTING HERE.

Marisa Renardy | Predicting the second wave of COVID-19 in Washtenaw County, MI | Nov 10 2020

 

CSCS/MIDAS/MICDE Seminar | Predicting the second wave of COVID-19 in Washtenaw County, MI  <---To View Click Here

Marissa Renardy, UM Department of Microbiology & Immunology (Michigan Medicine)

Date of Seminar:  Tuesday, October 20, 2020

"In this work, we study and predict the spread of COVID-19 in Washtenaw County, MI through applying a discrete and stochastic network-based modeling framework. In this framework.....SEE FULL EVENT LISTING HERE

 

Center for the Study of Complex Systems
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500 Church St
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cscs@umich.edu
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