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class=green>SICC > 留言于2017-01-27 08:33:06 |
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评论:UPDATE - From The Chinese American Professors and Professionals Network (2017 No.02) |
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COMPLEX NETWORKS: THEORY, METHODS, AND APPLICATIONS (3rd edition) Lake Como School of Advanced Studies Villa del Grumello, Como, Italy, 15-19 May 2017 http://ntmc.lakecomoschool.org/ Sponsored by CSS - Complex Systems Society SICC - Italian Society for Chaos and Complexity *** DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION: March 5, 2017 *** Many real systems can be modeled as networks, where the elements of the system are nodes and interactions between elements are edges. An even larger set of systems can be modeled using dynamical processes on networks, which are in turn affected by the dynamics. Networks thus represent the backbone of many complex systems, and their theoretical and computational analysis makes it possible to gain insights into numerous applications. Networks permeate almost every conceivable discipline---including sociology, transportation, economics and finance, biology, and myriad others---and the study of "network science" has thus become a crucial component of modern scientific education. The school "Complex Networks: Theory, Methods, and Applications" offers a succinct education in network science. It is open to all aspiring scholars in any area of science or engineering who wish to study networks of any kind (whether theoretical or applied), and it is especially addressed to doctoral students and young postdoctoral scholars. The aim of the school is to deepen into both theoretical developments and applications in targeted fields.
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE .STEFANO BATTISTON, University of Zurich .VITTORIA COLIZZA, Inserm & Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, and ISI Foundation, Turin .PETTER HOLME, Sungkyunkwan University .YAMIR MORENO, University of Zaragoza .CARLO PICCARDI, Politecnico di Milano .MASON A. PORTER, UCLA
LECTURERS .GINESTRA BIANCONI, Queen Mary University of London .JAVIER BORGE-HOLTHOEFER, Complex Systems Group, Internet Interdisciplinary Institute, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Barcelona .CIRO CATTUTO, Scientific Director & Data Science Laboratory head, ISI Foundation, Turin .JAMES GLEESON, MACSI, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Limerick .THILO GROSS, Department of Engineering Mathematics, Merchant Venturers School of Engineering, University of Bristol .YAMIR MORENO, Institute for Biocomputation and Physics of Complex Systems (BIFI) & Department of Theoretical Physics, University of Zaragoza
PROGRAM Monday, 15 May, morning: Introduction to Networks (Bianconi) Monday, 15 May, afternoon: Continuous-state Dynamics on Networks (Gross) Tuesday, 16 May, morning: Discrete-state Dynamics on Networks (Gleeson) Wednesday, 17 May, morning: Multilayer Networks (Bianconi) Wednesday, 17 May, afternoon: short talks by students Thursday, 18 May, morning: Evolutionary Game Theory and Human Behavior (Moreno) Friday, 19 May, morning: Computational Social Science/1 - Unconventional Approaches to Collective Behavior: Information and Urban ecosystems (Borge-Holthoefer) Friday, 19 May, afternoon: Computational Social Science/2 (Cattuto) For more information and application: http://ntmc.lakecomoschool.org/ Sponsored by CSS - Complex Systems Society The Complex Systems Society (CSS, http://cssociety.org), in the framework of the Thematic School Support (TSS) Program 2017, grants 2 fee waivers to support the attendance of PhD students and Junior Post Doctoral researchers who are members of the CSS.
SICC - Italian Society for Chaos and Complexity http://www.sicc-it.org |
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UCLA Center for Chinese Studies 留言于2017-01-24 08:02:40 |
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评论:UPDATE - From The Chinese American Professors and Professionals Network(2017 No.01) |
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Forget Chineseness: On the Geopolitics of Cultural Identification Thursday, Feb 02, 2017, 4:00 PM - 5:30 PM 10383 Bunche Hall, UCLA Taiwan Studies Lecture by Allen Chun, Academia Sinica Forget Chineseness provides a critical interpretation not only of discourses of Chinese identity—Chineseness—but also of how they have reflected differences between “Chinese” societies, such as in Hong Kong, Taiwan, PRC, Singapore and communities “overseas.” It asserts that identity has meaning not only in cultural, representational terms but is moreover a product of its embeddedness in specific entanglements of modernity, colonialism, nation-state formation, and globalization. By articulating these processes underlying institutional practices vis-à-vis public mindsets, it is thus possible to elucidate various epistemic moments that lay the basis for their socio-political transformation.
From a broader perspective, this should have salient ramifications for prevailing discussions of identity politics. Not only has the concept of identity been predicated on flawed notions of ethnicity and culture in the social “sciences,” but it has been acutely exacerbated by polarizing assumptions that drive our understanding of identity “politics.” Allen Chun is Research Fellow at the Institute of Ethnology, Academia Sinica, Taiwan and the author of Unstructuring Chinese Society: The Fictions of Colonial Practice and the Changing Realities of “Land” in the New Territories of Hong Kong.
UCLA Center for Chinese Studies 11381 Bunche Hall, Los Angeles, CA 90095 Campus Mail Code: 148703 Tel: (310) 825-8683 Fax: (310) 206-3555 china@international.ucla.edu
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Royal Roots Global Inc. 留言于2017-01-19 11:06:20 |
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评论:UPDATE - From The Chinese American Professors and Professionals Network(2017 No.01) |
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Happy New Year 2017 and Happy New Year of the Rooster to you! A proud look back at China in 2016 is reported in President Xi Jinping's New Year address in the January 2017 China Call Report, along with a look at to how China may fare in 2017 by a long-time McKinsey & Company observer. This issue also reports a Scholl Foundation Fellow's revelations about public opinion research in China, the featuring of Chicago design in Hong Kong, and the way philanthropy is linked to the growth stages of people and society. To access the January issue of China Call Report online, please follow this link: www.rroots.net/0117eng.pdf
Best Wishes from Chicago,
China Call Report 980 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 1400, Chicago, IL 60611 Tel 1.312.202.0389 Fax 1.312.896.5841 Website www.rroots.net
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China Institute in America 留言于2017-01-18 10:20:20 |
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评论:UPDATE - From The Chinese American Professors and Professionals Network(2017 No.01) |
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Chinese New Year Celebration, Year of the Rooster Saturday, February 4, 1:00PM-7:00PM Family Workshops: 1:00PM-3:30PM Party & Performance: 4:00PM-7:00PM Kick off the Year of the Rooster with China Institute's signature New Year Celebration. In the afternoon, we will open our doors to families for New Year-themed workshops and activities including dumpling making, storytelling, and lantern-making. In the evening, adults and families alike are welcome to a party featuring a lion dance, food, and live music.
China Institute's Rockin' Rooster Chinese New Year Concert Saturday, February 4, 4:00PM-7:00PM Join us at our first annual New Year's concert featuring a lion dance, food and live music! 4:00 - Doors Open & Lion Dance 4:30 - Mr. Cake 5:00 - SungBeats 6:00 - TiA & Kohei (Food and drinks will be available for purchase) Adults and Families - All are welcome!
Performance & Panel Discussion: Incident at Hidden Temple Tuesday, February 7 7:30PM With his new play Incident at Hidden Temple, playwright Damon Chua builds on the success of his earlier work focusing on China in the 1940s with a narrative inspired by real events. China Institute invites you to a special performance where we will partner with Pan Asian Repertory Theatre to present a post-show panel discussion on the play's historical setting featuring Incident at Hidden Temple writer Damon Chua alongside historical specialists. Learn More & Register
Film Art Set in Times of Chaos: Chinese Martial Arts Films February 16 & 22; March 2, 9 &16 6:30PM-8:30PM This five-week film series is dedicated to classics of wuxia, China's heroic stories of martial arts and swordplay, and accompanies China Institute's exhibition Art in a Time of Chaos: Masterworks from Six Dynasties China, 3rd - 6th Centuries. The screenings will be introduced by a distinguished scholar and will feature accompanying contextual materials written by series curator Nancy Jervis. Contact: artsculture@chinainstitute.org |
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| 共13780条评论,每页10条,当前第225/1378页 |
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