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University of Graz COLIBRI News Talk "Multi-scale Feedbacks for Complex System Coordination"
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Wednesday, 16 October 2019

Talk "Multi-scale Feedbacks for Complex System Coordination"

Talk given by Dr. Ana Diaconescu, Wednesday, 16th of October, 18:00-19:00 CET, HS 02.11, Institute of Biology, Universitätsplatz 2

Why are (most) complex systems hierarchical?

What can we learn from their designs?

-- Multi-scale Feedbacks for Complex System Coordination --

 

Multi-scale structures, or hierarchies, are prevalent in large-scale dynamic systems - from inert matter to living and artificial systems, and systems-of-systems. Why is that? What do these hierarchies have in common? What is transferable across domains? Despite general knowledge and intuition about the benefits of hierarchical designs, a concrete theory for understanding and developing multi-scale systems is still missing.

This presentation provides some initial steps towards such theory. It identifies common design aspects and variants, and synthesises them via a new design pattern-- Multi-Scale Feedbacks. Its purpose is to help design adaptive coordination schemes for large-scale systems. The pattern was distilled from a cross-domain study, including particle physics, molecular biology, neuroscience, insect and human organisations, ecosystems, autonomous control and systems-of-systems. Several simulators are also being developed to help explore and evaluate concrete design hypothesis. Notably, a hierarchical cellular automata simulator allows showing how design parameter variations impact the resulting multi-scale patterns.

This research seeks to correlate multi-scale design variants to qualitative properties, including resilience, stability, reactivity and sensitivity.

Related news

COLIBRI Visiting Fellow Dr. Ziggy O'Reilly

What vision reveals about the seat of consciousness

Researchers at the University of Graz are using vision experiments to investigate how our brain constructs reality. The results offer insights into individual perception, are a piece of the puzzle in the search for the “consciousness” and offer new approaches to understanding neurodiversity.

True crime: psychologist identifies reasons for the fascination of the genre

True crime documentaries, series and podcasts about real crimes have many fans. What is it that makes this genre so fascinating? Is it the insights into the dark side of the human psyche or into meticulous investigations? Or is it that dealing with crime trains our ability to cope with fear? These and other questions are being asked by psychologist Corinna Perchtold-Stefan in a research project. The first results are already available.

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