Face2Face: Diversity in Complex Social Phenomena

09:30h, 15-01-2024 (Sala de Graus Eduard Fontseré, Física UB)

Dan Dediu (Departament de Filologia Catalana i Lingüística General; UBICS) & Josep Perelló (Departament de Física dela Matèria Condensada; UBICS)


Seminar by I. Ràfols (Centre for Science and Technology Studies, Leiden University, The Netherlands UNESCO Chair on Diversity and Inclusion in Global Science)

16:00h, 05-10-2023 (Sala de Graus Eduard Fontseré, Física UB)  

Network approaches for ‘measuring’ interdisciplinarity: from indicators to indicating

Ismael Ràfols

Centre for Science and Technology Studies, Leiden University, The Netherlands

UNESCO Chair on Diversity and Inclusion in Global Science

As interdisciplinarity has been seen as increasingly important in science policy, there have been attempts to come up with indicators based on network analysis of bibliometric data. In this presentation, I review the operationalization of the main understandings of interdisciplinarity in terms of breadth, integration, and transformation of research over epistemic networks. I showcase the potential uses of science maps to signal interdisciplinarity, as well as the ambiguity of these operationalizations in the face of multiple choices regarding classifications, cognitive distance across categories and diversity measures (from Shannon to Tsallis entropies, from Rao-Stirling to Leinster-Cobbold diversities). In consequence, I propose that fixed indicators are problematic. Instead, interdisciplinary research is best assessed through a process of indicating over epistemic networks the particular understandings on interdisciplinarity that are seen as relevant for a specific research context or purpose.  This case illustrates the dangers in “science of science” of assuming robustness in singular operationalizations of ambiguous concepts such as novelty, disruption or quality.

https://www.leidenmadtrics.nl/articles/on-measuring-interdisciplinarity-from-indicators-to-indicating


Miniworkshop Matèria viva

09:30h, 08-02-2023 (Sala de Graus Eduard Fontseré, Física UB)  

Workshop Matèria Viva

Lloc: Eduard Fontserè, Facultat de Física, UB

Dia: 8 de Febrer de 2023

Programa:

9:30h – 10:10h David Reguera – The role of physics in the genesis of viruses

10:10h – 10:50h Marta Ibañes – Principles for Biological Diversity

10:50h – 11:20h Cafè

11:20h – 12:00h Jaume Casademunt – Living systems as active matter: hydrodynamics of tissues”.

12:00 – 12:40h Jordi Soriano –Neuronal networks in vitro and in silico: from complex systems to medicine

12:40 – 13:00h Taula rodona i debat


Social explosions: some percolating properties

12:00h, 13-12-2022 (Aula 3.20)

Title: Social explosions: some percolating properties.

Speaker: Yerali Gandica, Laboratoire de Physique Theorique et Modelisation, UMR-8089 CNRS, CY Cergy Paris Universite, France

Abstract: In this oral presentation, I will present a study of four social explosions under the eyes of self-organised criticality. In a first part, I will present some results to claim the presence of some signs of universality in the social phenomenon of demonstrations. I will show, for example, that the same power-law exponents were found whenever hashtags-frequency distributions were calculated in either case: conserving the same windows-time and the same number of hashtags. Furthermore, the exponents for the distributions during the street episodes are smaller than before (and after) in all the events. The latter also happened in both situations: whenever the hashtags were counted only once per user or if all their usages were considered. The last-mentioned results, despite being robust, are not directly related to the connectivity between the participants. To go in that direction, for the second part, I will present a network-based study. Nodes are hashtags, and each weighted edge represents the number of different users who have posted those hashtags so far. The idea behind is that strongly connected nodes represent the similarity of feelings between individuals.


Miniworkshop Physics of Matter

On 19th of July 2022, Dr. Pietro Tierno (UBICS member) has organized a Miniworkshop of Physics of Matter at Aula Magna Enric Cassasas, Physics Faculty, UB.

PROGRAM

9:00 – 9:15                     Welcome words: A. Diaz
9:15 – 9:40                    M. Carmen Miguel
9:45 – 10:10                  Eduard Vives
10:15 – 10:40                Sergi Granados Leyva
10:45 – 11:10                Jordi Ortín
Coffee break + discussions (20 min) 
11:30 – 11:55                  Levis Demian
12:00 – 12:25                  Pietro Tierno
12:30 – 12:55                  Alexis de la Cotte 
13:00 – 13:25                  Ramon Planet
13:25 – 13:30                   Closing remarks
Lunch 

Chair: Pietro Tierno

You can see the abstracts of the talks here.


Complexity in rock fracture and earthquakes: Spontaneous localisation and catastrophic failure in a granular medium

10:30h, 01-12-2021 (Sala de Graus Eduard Fontseré, Física UB)  

Wednesday, December 1st, 10:30-11:30, Sala de graus Eduard Fontserè, Facultat Física UB

Speaker: Ian Main, University of Edinburgh

Abstract: Brittle fracture in the Earth occurs on a variety of scales, from grain scale fractures to plate bounding faults. The structures are remarkably self-similar on a broad bandwidth of scales, with power-law scaling rules emerging spontaneously from the interplay between fluctuations associated with structural disorder and interactions associated with the concentration and redistribution of stress. Here I will present a set of recent results obtained by carrying out live deformation experiments on small rock samples in a synchrotron, using x-rays to ‘see’ the deformation and more recently also acoustic wave monitoring to ‘hear’ the mini-earthquakes it produces.
For crystalline rocks, we find the starting porosity of the material has a significant effect on the nature of the acceleration of precursory damage to failure, with higher porosities leading to an inverse power law in acoustic emission event rate v. time, with a well-defined failure time at the singularity. Power-law scaling of fracture sizes emerges spontaneously, with an exponent that decreases with time. Lower porosity materials also exhibit some precursory behaviour, but failure occurs suddenly, and earlier than you would expect. Using a separate set of experiments on synthetic materials as a guide, the early failure time can be explained by differences in the mean distances between pores and cracks in the starting material, with more disorder (higher porosity and lower inter-flaw distances) leading to more predictable behaviour.
One of the big problems in understanding the processes that lead up to catastrophic failure is that they occur too quickly to be captured in the time it takes to obtain a computed tomography image of the deformation in a synchrotron experiment. Accordingly, we slowed down this process using feedback from the acoustic emission event rate, to capture a series of images like the one above left, and hence observe the different stages of localisation after the point of yield and beyond peak stress in a porous sandstone. Here we see spontaneous localisation of ‘en-echelon’ tensile cracks, initially parallel the vertical maximum principal stress, followed by rotation as a shear band develops. We can then use digital image correlation to observe the local strain and use this to help locate micro-seismic events as on the diagram of the top right. We find shear and tensile deformation are closely correlated. Surprisingly, seismic amplitude is not necessarily correlated with local imaged strain; large local strain often occurs with small acoustic emissions, and vice versa. Local strain is overwhelmingly (>99%) aseismic, explained in part by grain/crack rotation along an emergent shear zone, and the shear fracture energy calculated from local dilation and shear strain on the fault is half of that inferred from the bulk deformation. This improvement in process-based understanding holds out the prospect of reducing systematic errors in forecasting system-sized catastrophic failure in a variety of applications.

You can find the presentation here and the recording here.


Seminari Marta Recasens (Google Inc.): La semàntica de la intel·ligència artificial (obert a tot el públic)

18:00h, 19-06-2018 (Aula Capella, Edifici Històric UB)

Resum:

Malgrat els avenços recents de la intel·ligència artificial i fins i tot les veus que auguren els seus «perills», la realitat és que la semàntica i pragmàtica del llenguatge segueixen sent un gran repte per als sistemes automàtics de processament del llenguatge natural (PLN). En aquesta xerrada exemplificaré aquest repte a través de dues tasques de PLN: la resolució de la coreferència i els sistemes de diàleg. Oferiré una descripció general d’aquestes tasques juntament amb estudis recents i exemples per il·lustrar quins aspectes semàntics estan resolts i quins són encara el focus de la recerca actual, especialment des de la perspectiva de les aplicacions de PLN en productes comercials.

Biografia:

La Dra. Marta Recasens és investigadora a Google des del 2013. Anteriorment va ser investigadora postdoctoral a la Universitat de Stanford i membre del Stanford NLP Group. Va obtenir el doctorat en Lingüística a la UB l’any 2010 amb una tesi sobre la resolució de la coreferència. La seva investigació se centra en aproximacions empíriques i aplicades a la semàntica i pragmàtica del llenguatge des de la Lingüística Computacional.



James Sharpe (EMBL): Limb development, Turing patterns, and Computer modelling

18:30h, 16-05-2018 (Sala de Graus Eduard Fontseré (Fac. Física)) 

Abstract:

Dramatic progress has been made over the last 2 decades in how we access key types of biological data – in particular sequence-based data on genomic information. However, integrating this data to produce dynamic and predictive models of higher level biological phenomena (e.g. development, regeneration, homeostasis and cancer) has been limited. Questions about tissues and organs are still most often tackled at the molecular or cellular level. We tend to ask how individual progenitor cells respond to signals from their “environment”, and thus to focus on signal transduction pathways, gene regulatory events, and epigenetic memory. But an organ is more than just an environment for cells to “act” in – it is an integrated whole, a coherent community, with cells in constant genetic, chemical and mechanical communication with each other. New technical advances such as organoid culture, 3D mesoscopic imaging, multicellular omics and computer modeling are helping us to go beyond the molecular and cellular level, to understand multicellular feedback loops, long-range signalling networks and emergent collective decisions, and thus to see tissues and organs as systems in their own right. Modelling these higher-level processes in vitro and in silico will help us understand these complex processes at a deeper level, and I will discuss our own attempts in this direction, to understand one example of complex organogenesis – namely mammalian limb development.

https://www.embl.es/research/unit/sharpe/contact/index.html


NanoBioMedicine: Current technology, challenges and future guidelines

15:00h, 11-01-2018 (Sala de Graus Eduard Fontseré, Física UB) 

SONIA TRIGUEROS

CODIRECTOR OF THE INSTITUTE OF NANOTECHNOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD

Nanotechnology is a new and exciting field that has the potential to transform the way medical and health solutions are being developed. In the Department of Physics, my group investigates new techniques and materials at a nanometric scale. In the Department of Zoology, my group applies this knowledge directly to know the most relevant biology on a single molecule scale and then use science and technology to solve the most urgent medical problems of the 21st century. During the talk, I will focus on describing the field of nanotechnology, current applications and the potential of future applications. I will also explain the latest basic research projects and medical applications that we are developing.

Bio: The group of Sonia Trigueros focuses on the design of the new system of distribution of genes and drugs to specific cells. It is also developing new nanomedicines to address the problem of resistance to bacterial antibiotics. She is a doctor in molecular biology for the IBMB-CSIC and the University of Barcelona. After his postdoctoral research scholarships at Harvard and Oxford Universities, Trigueros was visiting research at various academic institutions, including NIH-Washington and the University of Havana. He is currently an associate researcher at the Department of Zoology and the Department of Physics and co-director of the Oxford Institute of Martin NanoMedicina at the University of Oxford.


Mapping The Structure Of Meaning Across Human Languages With Large Scale Semantic Networks

15:00h, 02-10-2017 (Sala de Professors Facultat de Filologia Edifici Josep Carner, 5a planta c/ Aribau, 2 08007 Barcelona)

BILL THOMPSON

Max Plank Institute for Psycholinguistics

«Mapping the structure of meaning accross human languages with large scale semantic networks»

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