FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Monday June 13, 2011



World Scientific Leaders to Gather in Boston for Conference on the Complex
World Around Us



Cambridge, MA --- The Eighth International Conference on Complex
Systems, hosted
by the New England Complex Systems Institute (NECSI), is coming to Boston
June 26-July 1. ICCS 2011 is expected to bring together more than 400
researchers from around the world. They will be presenting more than 300
papers on topics ranging from food (Cuisines as Complex Networks) to dealing
with destructive cults.



CNN Senior Vice President and Chief Innovation Officer David Bohrman,
inventor of the Magic Wall and other CNN data visualization
techniques, will give
the opening conference reception presentation Sunday evening, June 26.



“Papers such as those presented at this conference provide a logical approach
that helps policymakers predict results in fields ranging from healthcare to
Middle East unrest to crowd control,” says Yaneer Bar-Yam, NECSI President.
“The approach is a useful and much needed aid to decision-making.”



Among the many noteworthy presentations:



The Herbert A. Simon Award will be presented to banquet speaker Thomas
Schelling,
author of “Micromotives and Macrobehavior,” Nobel Laureate and Emeritus
Professor of the University of Maryland and Harvard University.



"Model Error, Convexity and Skewness" is the topic of New York
University Polytechnic
Institute Distinguished Professor Nassim Taleb, best known as the author of
"The Black Swan."



David Gondek of IBM’s Thomas J. Watson’s Research Center and a major
force behind
the new Jeopardy champion, Watson, will talk on machine intelligence
algorithms.



Professor Jerome Kagan, Daniel and Amy Starch Research Professor of Psychology,
Emeritus, at Harvard University, is one of the world's leading psychologists.
He discovered behaviors in infants that predict behaviors later in life.



Princeton University Professor John Hopfield, one of the world’s
foremost authorities
on neural networks, will be presenting "Animal Behavior and Emergent
Computational Dynamics," a paper describing how animal brains employ
collective neuron behavior to achieve ‘thinking.’



Dr. Stephen Wolfram, distinguished scientist, inventor and business leader.
Dr. Wolfram founded his own complexity science research organization and is
the author of "A New Kind of Science," which advocates for computational
systems to explain complexity in nature.



Tel Aviv University’s Professor Eshel Ben Jacob will speak about how bacteria
collectively solve problems by forming a kind of multicellular brain, and
will show movies of the bacteria solving optimization problems that cannot
be solved by modern computers.



Professor Kunihiko Kaneko of Tokyo University will speak about the principles
behind the evolution of multiple levels of biological organization:
molecules, cells, organisms, and ecosystems.



The Santa Fe Institute's Distinguished Professor and former President Geoffrey
West’s presentation, “The Complexity, Simplicity, and Unity of Living
Systems from Cells to Cities: Towards a Quantitative, Unifying Framework of
Biological and Social Structure, Organization and Dynamics," describes in
mathematical terms how cities and other large social structures are merely
'large organisms', and the implications for growth, development, and
potential collapse.



MIT's Human Dynamics Laboratory's Professor Alex 'Sandy' Pentland,
DARPA Internet
Grand Challenge winner and serial entrepreneur, will be presenting "How
Social Networks Shape Human Behavior."



Boston University Professor of Physics, Chemistry and Bioengineering Eugene
Stanley is a pioneer in interdisciplinary science and econophysics. His
paper, "Economic Fluctuations and Statistical Physics: Quantifying Extremely
Rare Events with Applications to the Present World Crisis," explores
financial crises as extensions of normal events and not outliers.



The New England Complex Systems Institute is based in Cambridge, MA. A pioneer
in the field of complex systems science, NECSI addresses questions previously
considered to be outside of the realm of scientific inquiry. Its research
draws on foundations from mathematics, physics, and computer science to
solve pressing problems in such areas as economics, healthcare, education,
military conflict, ethnic violence, and international development. Its goal
is to expand the boundaries of knowledge and to solve problems of science
and society.



The conference runs from June 26 to July 1. Details and registration (including
press registration) are at www.necsi.edu.



 Media contacts:

Clare Froggatt, [email protected], 617-547-4100

Steve Ross, [email protected]





-- 
Steve Ross
201-456-5933 mobile
781-284-8810 landline
707-WOW-SSR3 (707-969-7773) Google Voice
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[email protected]



-- 
==========================================
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]
==========================================

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