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To be held Thursday July 19th, 3:30pm, Purple Room, Kellogg Center, Michigan State University
Held in conjunction with the Artificial Life 13 conference, hosted by the BEACON center at Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI.
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Highly-recursive processes, embedded patterns, and inherent high-dimensionality, within which events of interest may be embedded.
Processes that result in rare events that are of large magnitude or extreme in nature, which are related to events of interest.
Processes that result in significant fluctuations, within which events of interest are embedded.
Social, cognitive, or neuronal processes that are not explicitly causal (diffuse and/or strongly interacting).
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Updates
Check out the videos from and about the workshop on our Vimeo channel
1/24/2014: Interesting essays on statistical concepts that should be retired (from Edge's annual question - 2014): Bart Kosko (statistical independence), N. Nassim Taleb (standard deviation), and Gerd Gigerenzer (adhering to statistical ritual).
11/19/2013: Synthetic Daisies blog post The Inefficiency (and Information Content) of Scientific Discovery.
10/27/2013: Synthetic Daisies blog post Modeling Processes with No Beginning, an Adaptive Middle, and No End.
10/22/2013: Synthetic Daisies blog post The Consensus-Novelty Dampening.
9/10/2013: Synthetic Daisies blog post The Value of Academic Work (brief exploration).
5/5/2013: Synthetic Daisies blog post The significance of influence metrics: some fun with Klout and Google Scholar.
4/20/2013: Synthetic Daisies blog post Replication, Model Organisms, and the Role of Evolutionary Signatures.
2/15/2013: If your results are unpredictable, does it make them any less true? HTDE 2013.1 Available on Figshare, doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.157087
12/5/2012: Synthetic Daisies blog post Triangulating Scientific “Truths”: an ignorant perspective. read
9/8/2012: Synthetic Daisies blog post on "wicked" problems read.
7/19/2012: Please feel free to start a conversation on the topic(s) in the comments section below.
7/19/2012: Please feel free to start a conversation on the topic(s) in the comments section below.
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presentation (slides) video |
4:00 - 4:20 Toward Robotic Intelligence: Evolution of Memory Use in Digital Organisms |
4:20 - 4:40 Drawing Conclusions from Drunk Fish in Dynamic Environments |
4:40 - 5:00 Parallel Processing and Why it Matters to Everyone |
5:00 - 5:20 Multiscale and Rare Events in Physiology |
Identifying Hard-to-Define Problems in Regenerative Biology interview |
Rare and Hard-to-predict Events in Human Genetics and Disease interview |
4/9/2012:Synthetic Daisies blog post on "leaderless" systems and control read
2/22/2012: Workshop Announcement, call for remote/Second Life participation poster
2/3/2012: Featured in a Synthetic Daisies blog post call for participation
1/28/2012: Synthetic Daisies blog post on (computationally) representing rare events read
1/25/2012: Session accepted to Artificial Life 13 Tutorial Track. Submitted proposal can be seen here.
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Links to Interesting Videos on Related Topics:
Rare Events, explained in five minutes. Link to Video
Interview with Nicholas Nassim Taleb (Author of "The Black Swan"). Link to Video
Interview with David Graeber on Debt and the Construction of Monetary Value. Link to Video
Kevin Leyton-Brown on an Empirical Approach to Problem Hardness. Link to Video
Scott Aaronson presents the Complexity Zoo wiki
Mermaid's Tale blog post on "Extremophile Microbes". Link to Blog Post
Cristian Calude on Incompleteness (Google Tech Talks). Link to Video
Albert Laszlo-Barabasi on his book Bursts (Authors@Google). Link to Video
Draught Prediction and Monitoring. COURTESY: US Draught Portal.
Dispatches from the Replicability Crisis in science: "Why Most Published Research Findings Are False" and "Is the Replicability Crisis Overblown? Three Arguments Examined".
Prediction Markets. An emerging way to collectively predict the outcomes of events. Link to Video.
Frederic Cazals on Modeling Noisy Data: Towards a Generic Framework Coupling Morse Theory and Persistence Theory (Google Tech Talks). Link to Video
From Figure 5 Pan, R.K., Sinha, S., Kaski, K., Saramaki, J. The evolution of interdisciplinarity in physics. arXiv:1206.0108 [physics.soc-ph] (2012).
From Figure 4 Burnet et.al Describing Patients Normal Tissue Reactions. International Journal of Cancer, 79, 606-613 (1998).
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