jueves, 1 de enero de 2009

Winter School 2009: Social Structures in Communication Networks


On 5-10 January 2009 and chaired by Jorge Louça, has been celebrated at the University of Lisboa, the Winter School 2009: "Social Structures in Communication Networks". On Monday, Professor Louça presented the program and scientific goals in the context of the International Doctoral Program in Complexity Sciences. The "Universidade" is accomplishing a great effort following the way pioneered by Santa Fe Institute or the Complex Science Society at Paris.
Professor Araújo analysed whether biological-inspired network models contribute to the understanding of aggregate economic behaviors. Besides, and following the ideas by John von Neumann, she explained the redundant nature rather than efficient nature of the network structures, contributing to clarify the idea of efficiency versus reliability in social environments. In the evening, Professors Louça and Rodrigues introduced tools for the study of social networks like NWB, PAJEK, GUESS or UCINET.
On Tuesday, Professor Symons introduced in his second presentation, ideas including references to the analysis of emergent properties. Symons offers an alternative to the macro-properties model of emergence. Emergence is not restricted to macro-phenomena, but can appear at the intersection of networks. Objects or agents can be involved in distinguishable systems or networks simultaneously. An agent may participate in social, economic, political and other networks at the same time.
On Wednesday, Professors Louça and Rodrigues showed multi-agent based social simulation by means of tools like NETLOGO, MASON or BREVE, while on Thursday, both Professors outlined community detection in social networks, employing algorithms like Girvan-Newmann. In the evening, Professor Palla exposed the statistical properties of community evolution in complex networks. On Friday, Professor Marinheiro spoke about network architectures and organization. Network maps have been used to mitigate the problem of the understanding of the network structures. Professor Lopes explained that in the networked multimedia realm, "more is different".
Finally, on Saturday, 10th, it was programmed a keynote talk by James Sterbenz (University of Kansas), concerning adaptive computer network architectures.
I am very grateful to the University of Lisboa by the organization of this School in which young students and prestigious Professors, have shared very interesting viewpoints about the formal and social analysis of networks, mixing complex systems and dynamics of networks.
"The brain is a network of neurons; organizations are people networks; the global economy is a network of national economies, which are networks of markets...How do such networks matter?"
The link to the Winter School is:

1 comentario:

Priya dijo...

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Priya
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