>From my friend David Pines.  A very impressive presentation of online
exhibits/information related to a highly sophisticated aspect of
Complexity.

-tom

===================================================
Dear All,

I write to invite you to explore ICAM’s new online exhibits about emergent
phenomena, at www.emergentuniverse.org, which was launched on Oct.1,2009.
This graphically designed interactive flash site is not your typical science
site. It uses a mix of art and science -- as well discussions of the complex
problems of facing our society -- to draw in visitors having a broad range
of different interests. Given your interest in, and commitment to,
increasing science literacy among non-scientists, please go to
http://www.emergentuniverse.org/<http://www.emergentuniverse.org/STAGING/091109/index.html#/home>
to view the site for yourself. The official Davis press release follows
below.

We believe emergentuniverse.org represents an important new approach to
informal science education, and we hope you will agree. The initial
indications (based on an analysis of the responses sent to us by a
forty-plus person focus group and the google anlaytic reports on visitors to
the site) suggest that it has the potential of becoming a major site of
interest for the initial group we are trying to reach--savvy internet users
between the ages of fourteen and thirty. You can help this along by sharing
this information about the site with those you know in this age group and/or
with their parents or grandparents.

Suzi Tucker, our remarkably talented chief exhibit designer, is already at
work on her next interactive exhibit –Superconductivity: Quantum Electron
Emergence. We are now beginning planning for what will follow. Under
consideration are a major series of exhibits that focus on what is perhaps
the most important global scientific and educational challenge of this new
century—discovering and developing the new technological approaches that
will help us  achieve sustainable energy while adapting to global climate
change. Those on climate change would  be developed in collaboration with
the Wolf Ridge Environmental Learning Center, which has developed a terrific
manual on the topic  for teachers of middle-school students.

I welcome your feedback on the appearance and content of the site and look
forward to hearing from you.



Best regards,



David



EXPLORE THE EMERGENT UNIVERSE

With topics ranging from slime molds to quantum matter to Alzheimer's
Disease, a new online exhibit opening Oct. 1, The Emergent Universe (
www.emergentuniverse.org), aims to encourage young people to learn about
"emergence," complex behaviors that arise from the interaction of simple
parts, and encourages them to develop an “emergent perspective”.



  "An emergent perspective allows you to approach real world problems in a
different way," said David Pines, distinguished professor of physics at UC
Davis and co-director of the Institute for Complex Adaptive Matter, which
sponsored the website. "You realize that there are no unique solutions --
you have to try many different things, look for organizing principles, and
get a feel for what is connected to what."



 Emergent Universe uses animations, art, games, music and even a manga comic
book to draw viewers into exploring emergent phenomena. The exhibit is aimed
at 15 to 30-year-olds, college-bound or college-educated, but not
necessarily with a scientific background.



 "Different activities are designed to appeal to a broad range of learning
styles and interests," said designer and museum director, Suzi Tucker. "We
chose to go for exploration, to let people get sucked in." "We want to
convey the idea that emergence is not just about studying emergent behavior
in matter – there are general principles that apply in the world at large,
to climate change, to economics, to fixing our schools," Pines said. "The
idea is to introduce young people to the concept of emergence and encourage
them to think about it in their daily life," he said.



 A major part of the exhibit explores "the Fibril Connection:" a misfolded
amyloid protein that  can give rise to devastating conditions like
Alzheimer's Disease, yet the same proteins perform useful functions in other
living systems. Visitors can zoom in on a human brain and discover the
mysteries of amyloid through lab notebooks, animations and games.



 In the "Unlocking the Universe" section, visitors can:

*Listen to music composed to express the concepts of emergence in quantum
mechanics

*View a manga comic that illustrates an emergent perspective

*Zoom in on a pointillist image that illustrates length scales

*Play the "Game of Life," creating patterns from simple interacti

"Grow Art," from repeated application of very simple rules.

 The developers plan to add a new section on superconductivity in the next
year.

The site was designed and developed by Tucker, a former chemistry professor
at UC Davis, with interactive designer Stephen Hartzog and scientific input
from Pines, Daniel Cox, professor of physics at UC Davis and other members
of the Institute for Complex Adaptive Matter. The site was funded mainly by
the Institute, a multidisciplinary research program of the University of
California with 57 branches across the U.S. and globally, headquartered at
UC Davis, with additional support from private foundations, the National
Science Foundation, and individual donors.







On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 10:06 AM, David Pines <[email protected]> wrote:

> Dear Colleagues,
>
> Because of your interest in science education and outreach, I  write to
> invite you to come to a Colloquium I am giving this Thursday, Feb.3 at
> 3:30pm on Emergence.  The talk (see attached abstract) is intended for a
> general audience and will focus on no small part on the usefulness of
> emergence as a way to communicate the excitement and challenge of scientific
> research to non-scientists and what an emergent perspective brings to
> developing new initiatives in science education and engagement. Some of
> these, such as ICAM’s on line science museum, emergentuniverse.org, about
> which I will write you separately, may prove useful here in Santa Fe.
>
>
>
> I look forward to seeing many of you there.
>
>
>
> Best,
>
>
>
> David
>
>
>
>
>




-- 
==========================================
J. T. Johnson
Institute for Analytic Journalism -- Santa Fe, NM USA
www.analyticjournalism.com
505.577.6482(c)                                    505.473.9646(h)
http://www.jtjohnson.com                 [email protected]

"Be Your Own Publisher"
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