Complexity Digest 2011.24 2011/12/09 Archive: http://comdig.unam.mx "I think the next century will be the century of complexity." Stephen Hawking, 2000 _________________________________________________________________ Editor-in-Chief: Carlos Gershenson Founding Editor: Gottfried Mayer Webcast Archive relaunched: comdig.unam.mx/webcasts/ _________________________________________________________________ 01. Complex Systems: A Survey, arXiv 02. Building a Science of Cities, CASA Working Papers 03. What Are Leaders Really For?, HBR Blog Network 04. An Experimental Study of Homophily in the Adoption of Health Behavior, Science 05. Luis von Ahn: Massive-scale online collaboration, TED.com 05.01. Cheryl Hayashi: The magnificence of spider silk, TED.com 06. How to Fix World Transportation, BusinessWeek 06.01. Complexity in human transportation networks: a comparative analysis of worldwide air transportation and global cargo-ship movements, Eur. Phys. J. B 07. An Evolution Toward a Programmable Universe, NYTimes.com 08. Impact of epistasis and pleiotropy on evolutionary adaptation, Proc. R. Soc. B 09. Empathy and Pro-Social Behavior in Rats, Science 10. Energetics and the evolution of human brain size, Nature 11. How The "Internet Of Things" Is Turning Cities Into Living Organisms, Fast Company 12. Dynamics of non-equilibrium communities, Proc. R. Soc. B 13. The Dichotomy in Degree Correlation of Biological Networks, PLoS ONE 14. Context Modularity of Human Altruism, Science 14.01. Cooperation, structure and hierarchy in multiadaptive games, arXiv 15. Philosophy: Meditation in mind, Nature 16. Entangling Macroscopic Diamonds at Room Temperature, Science 17. The structure of coevolving infection networks, arXiv 17.01. Recurrent host mobility in spatial epidemics: beyond reaction-diffusion, Eur. Phys. J. B 18. Guiding the self-organization of random Boolean networks, Theory in Biosciences 19. Book Announcements 19.01. Evolution and the Emergent Self: The Rise of Complexity and Behavioral Versatility in Nature, Columbia University Press 19.02. The Number That Killed Us: A Story of Modern Banking, Flawed Mathematics, and a Big Financial Crisis, Wiley 19.03. The Common Extremalities in Biology and Physics, Second Edition: Maximum Energy Dissipation Principle in Chemistry, Biology, Physics and Evolution, Elsevier 19.04. Where the Conflict Really Lies: Science, Religion, and Naturalism, Oxford University Press 20. Links & Snippets 20.01. Other Publications 20.02. Event Announcements 20.03. Video Announcements 20.04. Other Announcements _________________________________________________________________ 01. Complex Systems: A Survey , arXiv Abstract: A complex system is a system composed of many interacting parts, often called agents, which displays collective behavior that does not follow trivially from the behaviors of the individual parts. Examples include condensed matter systems, ecosystems, stock markets and economies, biological evolution, and indeed the whole of human society. Substantial progress has been made in the quantitative understanding of complex systems, particularly since the 1980s, using a combination of basic theory, much of it derived from physics, and computer simulation. The subject is a broad one, drawing on techniques and ideas from a wide range of areas. Here I give a survey of the main themes and methods of complex systems science and an annotated bibliography of resources, ranging from classic papers to recent books and reviews. * [1] Complex Systems: A Survey, M. E. J. Newman, 2011/12/6, arXiv:1112.1440 [Am. J. Phys. 79, 800-810 (2011)] [1] http://arXiv.org/abs/1112.1440 _________________________________________________________________ 02. Building a Science of Cities , CASA Working Papers Excerpt: Our understanding of cities is being transformed by new approaches from the complexity sciences (Batty, 2005). Here we review progress, sketching the background beginning with the systems approach which treated systems as being organised from the top down to that which now dominates where systems are treated as evolving from the bottom up. The switch in thinking we describe is best pictured in the transition from thinking of 'cities as machines' to 'cities as organisms'. (…) * [2] Building a Science of Cities, Michael Batty, 2011/11, CASA Working Paper 170 [2] http://www.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/casa/publications/working-paper-170 _________________________________________________________________ 03. What Are Leaders Really For? , HBR Blog Network Excerpt: By refusing to name a leader, Occupy Wall Street presents a challenge to this view. With no one figure to credit or blame, with no face to put on a sprawling inchoate movement, and with no hierarchy of power, we simply don't know how to process what "it" is, and therefore how to think about it. And because this absence of a familiar personality-centric narrative makes us uncomfortable, we are tempted to reject the whole thing as somehow not real. Or instead, we insist that in order to be taken seriously, the movement must first change to reflect what we expect from serious organizations — namely a charismatic leader to whom we can attribute everything. * [3] What Are Leaders Really For?, Duncan Watts, 2011/11/21, HBR Blog Network [3] http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2011/11/what_are_leaders_really_for.html#.TtEXVNOGo8I.twitter _________________________________________________________________ 04. An Experimental Study of Homophily in the Adoption of Health Behavior , Science Abstract: How does the composition of a population affect the adoption of health behaviors and innovations? Homophily—similarity of social contacts—can increase dyadic-level influence, but it can also force less healthy individuals to interact primarily with one another, thereby excluding them from interactions with healthier, more influential, early adopters. As a result, an important network-level effect of homophily is that the people who are most in need of a health innovation may be among the least likely to adopt it. Despite the importance of this thesis, confounding factors in observational data have made it difficult to test empirically. We report results from a controlled experimental study on the spread of a health innovation through fixed social networks in which the level of homophily was independently varied. We found that homophily significantly increased overall adoption of a new health behavior, especially among those most in need of it. * [4] An Experimental Study of Homophily in the Adoption of Health Behavior, Damon Centola, 2011/12/2, DOI: 10.1126/science.1207055, Science Vol. 334 no. 6060 pp. 1269-1272 [4] http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1207055 _________________________________________________________________ 05. Luis von Ahn: Massive-scale online collaboration , TED.com About this talk: After re-purposing CAPTCHA so each human-typed response helps digitize books, Luis von Ahn wondered how else to use small contributions by many on the Internet for greater good. At TEDxCMU, he shares how his ambitious new project, Duolingo, will help millions learn a new language while translating the Web quickly and accurately -- all for free. * [5] Luis von Ahn: Massive-scale online collaboration, 2011/12, TED.com * VIDEO - [6] Watch this talk [5] http://www.ted.com/talks/luis_von_ahn_massive_scale_online_collaboration.html [6] http://www.ted.com/talks/luis_von_ahn_massive_scale_online_collaboration.html _________________________________________________________________ 05.01. Cheryl Hayashi: The magnificence of spider silk , TED.com About this talk: Cheryl Hayashi studies spider silk, one of nature's most high-performance materials. Each species of spider can make up to 7 very different kinds of silk. How do they do it? Hayashi explains at the DNA level -- then shows us how this super-strong, super-flexible material can inspire. * [7] Cheryl Hayashi: The magnificence of spider silk, 2011/12, TED.com * VIDEO - [8] Watch this talk [7] http://www.ted.com/talks/cheryl_hayashi_the_magnificence_of_spider_silk.html [8] http://www.ted.com/talks/cheryl_hayashi_the_magnificence_of_spider_silk.html _________________________________________________________________ 06. How to Fix World Transportation , BusinessWeek Excerpt: Keeping people and goods moving safely and efficiently—whether by land, sea, or air—is one of the great challenges of the modern age. Complications include aging infrastructure, sprawling cities, shrinking budgets, and the predictable unpredictability of human behavior. To find out how to fix transportation for the 21st century (…) Norman Pearlstine gathered an all-star cast: [Dale Moser, Michael Replogle, Christopher Lee, Dennis Archer, Balaji Prabhakar, and O.P. Agarwal ] (…) * [9] How to Fix World Transportation, 2011/12/1, BusinessWeek [9] http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/how-to-fix-world-transportation-12012011.html _________________________________________________________________ 06.01. Complexity in human transportation networks: a comparative analysis of worldwide air transportation and global cargo-ship movements , Eur. Phys. J. B Excerpt: We present a comparative network-theoretic analysis of the two largest global transportation networks: the worldwide air-transportation network (WAN) and the global cargo-ship network (GCSN). We show that both networks exhibit surprising statistical similarities despite significant differences in topology and connectivity. Both networks exhibit a discontinuity in node and link betweenness distributions which implies that these networks naturally segregate into two different classes of nodes and links. * [10] Complexity in human transportation networks: a comparative analysis of worldwide air transportation and global cargo-ship movements, O. Woolley-Meza, C. Thiemann, D. Grady, J.J. Lee, H. Seebens, B. Blasius and D. Brockmann, 2011/12/8, DOI: 10.1140/epjb/e2011-20208-9, Eur. Phys. J. B [10] http://dx.doi.org/10.1140/epjb/e2011-20208-9 _________________________________________________________________ 07. An Evolution Toward a Programmable Universe , NYTimes.com Excerpt: Such computational power, co-located with the gigantic storage that holds the data from all the incoming data streams, will enable faster-than-real-time simulations of many aspects of our physical world. As Mike Liebhold and his colleagues at the Institute for the Future have discussed, computing will have evolved from merely sensing local information to analyzing it to being able to control it. In this evolution, the world gradually becomes programmable. * [11] An Evolution Toward a Programmable Universe, Larry Smarr, 2011/12/5, NYTimes.com [11] http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/06/science/larry-smarr-an-evolution-toward-a-programmable-world.html?_r=2 _________________________________________________________________ 08. Impact of epistasis and pleiotropy on evolutionary adaptation , Proc. R. Soc. B Excerpt: Evolutionary adaptation is often likened to climbing a hill or peak. While this process is simple for fitness landscapes where mutations are independent, the interaction between mutations (epistasis) as well as mutations at loci that affect more than one trait (pleiotropy) are crucial in complex and realistic fitness landscapes. * [12] Impact of epistasis and pleiotropy on evolutionary adaptation, Østman B , Hintze A , Adami C, December 2011, DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2011.0870, Proc. R. Soc. B vol. 279 no. 1727: 247-256 * Contributed by [13] Segismundo [12] http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2011.0870 [13] http://segis.name _________________________________________________________________ 09. Empathy and Pro-Social Behavior in Rats , Science Abstract: Whereas human pro-social behavior is often driven by empathic concern for another, it is unclear whether nonprimate mammals experience a similar motivational state. To test for empathically motivated pro-social behavior in rodents, we placed a free rat in an arena with a cagemate trapped in a restrainer. After several sessions, the free rat learned to intentionally and quickly open the restrainer and free the cagemate. Rats did not open empty or object-containing restrainers. They freed cagemates even when social contact was prevented. When liberating a cagemate was pitted against chocolate contained within a second restrainer, rats opened both restrainers and typically shared the chocolate. Thus, rats behave pro-socially in response to a conspecific’s distress, providing strong evidence for biological roots of empathically motivated helping behavior. * [14] Empathy and Pro-Social Behavior in Rats, Inbal Ben-Ami Bartal, Jean Decety, Peggy Mason, 2011/12/9, DOI: 10.1126/science.1210789, Science Vol. 334 no. 6061 pp. 1427-1430 [14] http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1210789 _________________________________________________________________ 10. Energetics and the evolution of human brain size , Nature Excerpt: The human brain stands out among mammals by being unusually large. The expensive-tissue hypothesis1 explains its evolution by proposing a trade-off between the size of the brain and that of the digestive tract, which is smaller than expected for a primate of our body size. Although this hypothesis is widely accepted, empirical support so far has been equivocal. Here we test it in a sample of 100 mammalian species, including 23 primates, by analysing brain size and organ mass data. We found that, controlling for fat-free body mass, brain size is not negatively correlated with the mass of the digestive tract or any other expensive organ, thus refuting the expensive-tissue hypothesis. * [15] Energetics and the evolution of human brain size, Ana Navarrete, Carel P. van Schaik & Karin Isler, 2011/12/01, DOI: 10.1038/nature10629, Nature 480, 91–93 [15] http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature10629 _________________________________________________________________ 11. How The "Internet Of Things" Is Turning Cities Into Living Organisms , Fast Company Excerpt: When city services can autonomously go online and digest information from the cloud, they can reach a level of performance never before seen. First up, water systems that automatically know when it will rain and react accordingly. * [16] How The "Internet Of Things" Is Turning Cities Into Living Organisms, Christopher Mims, Fast Company [16] http://www.fastcompany.com/biomimicry/how-the-internet-of-things-is-turning-cities-into-organisms _________________________________________________________________ 12. Dynamics of non-equilibrium communities , Proc. R. Soc. B Excerpt: Much effort in theoretical ecology has focused on identifying mechanisms that promote stable coexistence of species at equilibrium. However, in a consumer-resource model of competition along an environmental gradient, high-diversity assemblages have the potential to persist in non-equilibrium states for millions of generations with very little species loss. * [17] Persistence of high diversity in non-equilibrium ecological communities: implications for modern and fossil ecosystems, Olszewski TD, December 2011, DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2011.0936, Proc. R. Soc. B vol. 279 no. 1727: 230-236 * Contributed by [18] Segismundo [17] http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2011.0936 [18] http://segis.name _________________________________________________________________ 13. The Dichotomy in Degree Correlation of Biological Networks , PLoS ONE Excerpt: Most complex networks from different areas such as biology, sociology or technology, show a correlation on node degree where the possibility of a link between two nodes depends on their connectivity. It is widely believed that complex networks are either disassortative (links between hubs are systematically suppressed) or assortative (links between hubs are enhanced). In this paper, we analyze a variety of biological networks and find that they generally show a dichotomous degree correlation. * [19] The Dichotomy in Degree Correlation of Biological Networks, Hao D , Li C, December 2011, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0028322, PLoS ONE 6(12): e28322 * Contributed by [20] Segismundo [19] http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0028322 [20] http://segis.name _________________________________________________________________ 14. Context Modularity of Human Altruism , Science Abstract: Whereas altruism drives the evolution of human cooperation, ethno-religious diversity has been considered to obstruct it, leading to poverty, corruption, and war. We argue that current research has failed to properly account for the institutional environment and how it affects the role diversity plays. The emergence of thriving, diverse communities throughout human history suggests that diversity does not always lead to cooperation breakdown. We conducted experiments in Mostar, Bosnia-Herzegovina with Catholic Croats and Muslim Bosniaks at a critical historic moment in the city’s postwar history. Using a public goods game, we found that the ability to sanction is key to achieving cooperation in ethno-religiously diverse groups, but that sanctions succeed only in integrated institutional environments and fail in segregated ones. Hence, we show experimentally for the first time in a real-life setting that institutions of integration can unleash human altruism and restore cooperation in the presence of diversity. * [21] Context Modularity of Human Altruism, Marcus Alexander, Fotini Christia, 2011/12/9, DOI: 10.1126/science.1202599, Science Vol. 334 no. 6061 pp. 1392-1394 [21] http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1202599 _________________________________________________________________ 14.01. Cooperation, structure and hierarchy in multiadaptive games , arXiv Excerpt: Game-theoretical models where the rules of the game and the interaction structure both coevolves with the game dynamics -- multiadaptive games -- capture very flexible situations where cooperation among selfish agents can emerge. In this work, we will discuss a multiadaptive model presented in a recent Letter [Phys. Rev. Lett. 106, 028702 (2011)], and generalizations of it. The model captures a non-equilibrium situation where social unrest increases the incentive to cooperate and, simultaneously, agents are partly free to influence with whom they interact. (…) * [22] Cooperation, structure and hierarchy in multiadaptive games, Sungmin Lee, Petter Holme, Zhi-Xi Wu, 2011/12/7, arXiv:1112.1733 [22] http://arXiv.org/abs/1112.1733 _________________________________________________________________ 15. Philosophy: Meditation in mind , Nature Excerpt: Buddhism is a distinctive world religion. It lacks an 'omnigod' — an omnipresent, omniscient, all-powerful creator — and a notion of humans as complexes of physical bodies and souls that ascend to heaven after death. Could it be mingled with the scientific culture of the twenty-first century to produce a new philosophical outlook on the world, the mind and our values? That idea lies at the heart of these two contrasting books on Buddhism and science. * [23] Philosophy: Meditation in mind, Daniel Stoljar, 2011/12/8, DOI: 10.1038/480178a, Nature 480, 178 [23] http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/480178a _________________________________________________________________ 16. Entangling Macroscopic Diamonds at Room Temperature , Science Abstract: Quantum entanglement in the motion of macroscopic solid bodies has implications both for quantum technologies and foundational studies of the boundary between the quantum and classical worlds. Entanglement is usually fragile in room-temperature solids, owing to strong interactions both internally and with the noisy environment. We generated motional entanglement between vibrational states of two spatially separated, millimeter-sized diamonds at room temperature. By measuring strong nonclassical correlations between Raman-scattered photons, we showed that the quantum state of the diamonds has positive concurrence with 98% probability. Our results show that entanglement can persist in the classical context of moving macroscopic solids in ambient conditions. * [24] Entangling Macroscopic Diamonds at Room Temperature, K. C. Lee, et al., 2011/12/2, DOI: 10.1126/science.1211914, Science Vol. 334 no. 6060 pp. 1253-1256 [24] http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1211914 _________________________________________________________________ 17. The structure of coevolving infection networks , arXiv Abstract: Disease awareness in infection dynamics can be modeled with adaptive contact networks whose rewiring rules reflect the attempt by susceptibles to avoid infectious contacts. Simulations of this type of models show an active phase with constant infected node density in which the interplay of disease dynamics and link rewiring prompts the convergence towards a well defined degree distribution, irrespective of the initial network topology. We develop a method to study this dynamic equilibrium and give an analytic description of the structure of the characteristic degree distributions and other network measures. The method applies to a broad class of systems and can be used to determine the steady-state topology of many other adaptive networks. * [25] The structure of coevolving infection networks, Stefan Wieland, Tomas Aquino and Ana Nunes, 2011/11/30, arXiv:1111.7267 [25] http://arXiv.org/abs/1111.7267 _________________________________________________________________ 17.01. Recurrent host mobility in spatial epidemics: beyond reaction-diffusion , Eur. Phys. J. B Excerpt: Human mobility is a key factor in spatial disease dynamics and related phenomena. In computational models host mobility is typically modeled by diffusion in space or on metapolulation networks. Alternatively, an effective force of infection across distance has been introduced to capture spatial dispersal implicitly. Both approaches do not account for important aspects of natural human mobility, diffusion does not capture the high degree of predictability in natural human mobility patters, e.g. the high percentage of return movements to individuals’ base location, the effective force of infection approach assumes immediate equilibrium with respect to dispersal. These conditions are typically not met in natural scenarios. We investigate an epidemiological model that explicitly captures natural individual mobility patterns. * [26] Recurrent host mobility in spatial epidemics: beyond reaction-diffusion, V. Belik T. Geisel and D. Brockmann4, 2011/12/5, DOI: 10.1140/epjb/e2011-20485-2, Eur. Phys. J. B [26] http://dx.doi.org/10.1140/epjb/e2011-20485-2 _________________________________________________________________ 18. Guiding the self-organization of random Boolean networks , Theory in Biosciences Abstract: Random Boolean networks (RBNs) are models of genetic regulatory networks. It is useful to describe RBNs as self-organizing systems to study how changes in the nodes and connections affect the global network dynamics. This article reviews eight different methods for guiding the self-organization of RBNs. In particular, the article is focused on guiding RBNs toward the critical dynamical regime, which is near the phase transition between the ordered and dynamical phases. The properties and advantages of the critical regime for life, computation, adaptability, evolvability, and robustness are reviewed. The guidance methods of RBNs can be used for engineering systems with the features of the critical regime, as well as for studying how natural selection evolved living systems, which are also critical. * [27] Guiding the self-organization of random Boolean networks, Carlos Gershenson, 2011/11/30, DOI: 10.1007/s12064-011-0144-x, Theory in Biosciences, Online First [27] http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12064-011-0144-x _________________________________________________________________ 19. Book Announcements _________________________________________________________________ 19.01. Evolution and the Emergent Self: The Rise of Complexity and Behavioral Versatility in Nature , Columbia University Press Summary: How did humans emerge from the cosmos and the pre-biotic Earth, and what mechanisms of biological, chemical, and physical sciences drove this increasingly complex process? Neubauer presents a view of nature that describes the rising complexity of life in terms of increasing information content, first in genes and then in brains. The evolution of the nervous system expanded the capacity of organisms to store information, making learning possible. The author portrays four species with high brain-body ratios—chimpanzees, elephants, ravens, and dolphins—showing how each species shares with humans the capacity for complex communication, elaborate social relationships, flexible behavior (...). * [28] Evolution and the Emergent Self: The Rise of Complexity and Behavioral Versatility in Nature, Raymond L. Neubauer, 2011/12/06, Columbia University Press * Contributed by [29] Anton Joha [28] http://www.amazon.com/dp/0231150709/ref=as_li_ss_til?tag=compldiges-20&camp=0&creative=0&linkCode=as4&creativeASIN=0231150709&adid=1AQ6JP6HX7YRPYN54RC9& [29] mailto:antonjoha@gmail.com _________________________________________________________________ 19.02. The Number That Killed Us: A Story of Modern Banking, Flawed Mathematics, and a Big Financial Crisis , Wiley Summary: The devastating financial crisis that began in the summer of 2007 and led to staggering losses for the banking industry, a global economic recession, and an implosion in government finances was caused by two main factors: toxic assets and leverage. But why did banks and other financial institutions take on this "toxic leverage" in the first place? Because an immensely powerful, but little talked about, mathematical model told them to. Known as Value at Risk (VaR), this model inaccurately projected no risk for these clearly worthless assets, insisting that they could be accumulated worry-free. (...) * [30] The Number That Killed Us: A Story of Modern Banking, Flawed Mathematics, and a Big Financial Crisis, Pablo Triana, 2011/12/06, Wiley * Contributed by [31] Anton Joha [30] http://www.amazon.com/dp/0470529733/ref=as_li_ss_til?tag=compldiges-20&camp=0&creative=0&linkCode=as4&creativeASIN=0470529733&adid=0DVFGHXZRWYJAH04F5FB& [31] mailto:antonjoha@gmail.com _________________________________________________________________ 19.03. The Common Extremalities in Biology and Physics, Second Edition: Maximum Energy Dissipation Principle in Chemistry, Biology, Physics and Evolution , Elsevier Summary: This book is the first unified systemic description of dissipative phenomena, taking place in biology, and non-dissipative (conservative) phenomena which is more relevant to physics. Fully updated and revised, this new edition extends our understanding of nonlinear phenomena in biology and physics from the extreme / optimal perspective. * [32] The Common Extremalities in Biology and Physics, Second Edition: Maximum Energy Dissipation Principle in Chemistry, Biology, Physics and Evolution, Adam Moroz, 2011/11/29, Elsevier * Contributed by [33] Anton Joha [32] http://www.amazon.com/dp/0123851874/ref=as_li_ss_til?tag=compldiges-20&camp=0&creative=0&linkCode=as4&creativeASIN=0123851874&adid=1FD9D03N3TAZM56H1EMM& [33] mailto:antonjoha@gmail.com _________________________________________________________________ 19.04. Where the Conflict Really Lies: Science, Religion, and Naturalism , Oxford University Press Summary: This book is a long-awaited major statement by a pre-eminent analytic philosopher, Alvin Plantinga, on one of our biggest debates -- the compatibility of science and religion. Plantinga examines where this conflict is supposed to exist - evolution, evolutionary psychology, analysis of scripture, scientific study of religion - as well as claims by Dan Dennett, Richard Dawkins, and Philip Kitcher that evolution and theistic belief cannot co-exist. Plantinga makes a case that their arguments are not only inconclusive but that the supposed conflicts themselves are superficial, due to the methodological naturalism used by science. (...) * [34] Where the Conflict Really Lies: Science, Religion, and Naturalism, Alvin Plantinga, 2011/12/09, Oxford University Press * Contributed by [35] Anton Joha [34] http://www.amazon.com/dp/0199812098/ref=as_li_ss_til?tag=compldiges-20&camp=0&creative=0&linkCode=as4&creativeASIN=0199812098&adid=1Z931DCC37B1VMYDF2Z2& [35] mailto:antonjoha@gmail.com _________________________________________________________________ 20. Links & Snippets _________________________________________________________________ 20.01. Other Publications - Control and Synchronization of Neuron Ensembles, 2011/11/27, arXiv:1111.6306 - Modularity, Noise and natural selection, 2011/12/6, arXiv:1112.1391 _________________________________________________________________ 20.02. Event Announcements New England Complex Systems Institute Winter School, Cambridge, MA, USA, 2012/01/02-13 41th Winter Meeting on Statistical Physics, Xalapa, Veracruz, Mexico, 2012/01/3-6 VI Congreso Bienal Internacional Complejidad 2012, Havana, Cuba, 2012/01/10-13 38th International Conference on Current Trends in Theory and Practice of Computer Science, Å pindlerův Mlýn, Czech Republic, 2012/01/21-27 4th International Conference on Agents and Artificial Intelligence - ICAART 2012, Vilamoura, Algarve, Portugal, 2012/02/6-8 WIVACE 2012 Italian Workshop on Artificial Life and Evolutionary Computation "Artificial Life, Evolution and Complexity" , Parma, Italy, 2012/02/20-21 3rd Workshop on Complex Networks, Melbourne, Florida, USA, 2012/03/7-9 evostar - the main european events on evolutionary computation eurogp, evocop, evobio, evomusart and evoapplications, Málaga, Spain, 2012/03/11-13 9th International Conference on the Evolution of Language (Evolang IX), Kyoto, Japan, 2012/03/13-16 IWSOS'12 (Sixth International Workshop on Self-Organizing Systems), Delft, The Netherlands, 2012/03/15-16 5th International Nonlinear Science Conference 2012, Barcelona, Spain, 2011/03/15-17 IPCAT 2012: Ninth International Conference on Information Processing in Cells and Tissues, Cambridge, United Kingdom, 2012/03/31-04/02 21st European Meeting on Cybernetics and Systems Research, Vienna, Austria, 2012/04/10-13 Self-* Systems – Biological Foundations and Technological Applications. Complexity and Management: from the Concept of Innovation to Social Responsibility. Design and Self-Organization in the Emergence of Effective Organizations. Collective Intelligence 2012, Cambridge, MA, USA, 2012/04/18-20 2012 IEEE World Congress on Computational Intelligence, Brisbane, Australia, 2012/06/10-15 CiE 2012 Turing Centenary conference: How the World Computes, Cambridge, UK, 2012/06/18-23 Cellular Automata Algorithms & Architectures (CAAA 2012), Madrid, Spain, 2012/07/2-6 GECCO 2012, Philadelphia, USA, 2012/07/7-11 25th European Conference on Operational Research, Vilnius, Lithuania, 2012/07/8-11 ALife XIII: The Thirteenth International Conference on the Simulation and Synthesis of Living Systems, Lansig, Michigan, USA, 2012/08/19-22 12th International Conference on Parallel Problem Solving From Nature (PPSN2012), Taormina, Italy, 2012/09/1-5 ECCS'12: European Conference on Complex Systems, Brussels, Belgium, 2012/09/3-7 Interdisciplinary Symposium on Complex Systems, Kos island, Greece, 2012/09/19-25 10th International Conference on Cellular Automata for Research and Industry (ACRI 2012), Santorini Island, Greece, 2012/09/24-27 _________________________________________________________________ 20.03. Video Announcements Complexity Digest videos. Lakeside Labs videos. FuturICT videos. Brain-Mind Institute webinars IFISC@uib.es seminars. [36] ASSYST Digital Library. TED Talks. Edge Videos CERN Webcast Service. Dean LeBaron's Video Casts. [36] http://www.assystcomplexity.eu/video.jsp _________________________________________________________________ 20.04. Other Announcements Call for papers: Special issue of JSSC on Complex Systems and Sports, 2011/12/31 [37] ASSYSTComplexity One of the main goals of the ASSYST Coordination Action is to promote Complex Systems for Socially Intelligent ICT (COSI-ICT) and, more generally, Complex Systems (CS) Science in Europe and Worldwide. We do this by communicating widely with scientists, policy makers, and business people, and by showcasing success stories of CS applications. [38] Job openings in Complex Systems Modelling and Physics of Complex Systems, MSc & PhD Programme, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Madrid, Spain. [39] Research Positions in Complex Systems The New England Complex Systems Institute ( [40] NECSI) has openings for postdoctoral appointments, and scholarships for research supervision in the study of complex systems. Call for Papers: Cliodynamics: The Journal of Theoretical and Mathematical History Friends of Complexity Theory in Cuba, inlcudes Revista Pensando la Complejidad. DDLab, new release available! DDLab is a free set of tools for researching cellular automata, random Boolean networks, multi-value discrete dynamical networks, and beyond. See introductory video. [41] [37] http://www.assystcomplexity.eu [38] http://jobs.cssociety.org/ [39] http://www.necsi.edu/education/postdocstudent.html [40] http://www.necsi.edu [41] http://www.springer.com/complexity?cm_mmc=3rd%20party%20website-_-3rd%20party%20website%20banner-_-PSE744-_-EncComplex target=new _________________________________________________________________ [42]Complexity Digest is an independent publication available to organizations that may wish to repost ComDig to their own mailing lists. ComDig is published by the [43]Computer Sciences Department, [44]IIMAS and the [45]C3 at the [46]Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico and edited by [47]Carlos Gershenson. To unsubscribe from this list, please go to http://comdig.unam.mx/subscriptions.php [42] http://comdig.unam.mx/ [43] http://turing.iimas.unam.mx/En/index.html [44] http://www.iimas.unam.mx/ [45] http://c3.fisica.unam.mx/ [46] http://www.unam.mx [47] http://turing.iimas.unam.mx/~cgg/