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Non-Archimedean and Tropical Geometry (2015)

February 1-7, 2015   Organizers: Matt Baker, Georgia Institute of Technology Same Payne, Yale University This symposium focused on setting a clear agenda for future developments in the related fields...

The Origin of Specificity in Regulated Protein Degradation

One of the characteristic features of life — specificity — emerges in metabolism, information transfer from DNA to protein, embryology, immunology and virtually every other process. Its explanation on the molecular level is thermodynamic stability and structural complementarity. Yet one disturbing issue persists: the protein and nucleic acid sequences coding for that specificity are generally too small to distinguish actual partners from competitors. Similarly, protein degradation conveys specificity through very short sequences. The process is so kinetically complex that bulk kinetic experiments and a few molecular structures are insufficient to explain how specificity is achieved. Using single molecule kinetic measurements, we have deconvolved much of that specificity.

New Directions in Approximations Algorithms (2015)

February 22-28, 2015   Organizers: Sanjeev Arora, Princeton University Uriel Feige, Weizmann Institute Michel Goemans, Massachusetts Institute of Technology David Shmoys, Cornell University This is the second Simons Symposium on...

A Dark Matter Hunter’s Guide to the Universe

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

Kathryn Zurek will review evidence for the presence of dark matter in our universe and the need for a new theory to describe the dark matter sector.

Mineral Evolution and Ecology, and the Co-evolution of Life and Rocks

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

In this lecture, Hazen will examine how Earth’s near-surface environment has evolved as a consequence of selective physical, chemical and biological processes — an evolution that is preserved in the mineralogical record.

Quantum Entanglement (2015)

March 15-21, 2015   Organizers: Shamit Kachru, Stanford University Hirosi Ooguri, Caltech Subir Sachdev, Harvard University Since our last symposium, quantum entanglement has become even more important in areas of...

Online Social Systems

People spend hours a day interacting in online settings, ranging from social media sites to a broad range of digital communities designed for work, education and entertainment. Such systems are generally intended to elicit particular activities or forms of engagement, yet we have relatively little understanding of the resulting behaviors or of how system design may contribute to those behaviors. This talk will discuss work that aims to develop models of human behavior in online settings, both to inform system design but also to address fundamental questions in the social sciences.

Light to Life

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

All life on Earth is based on electron transfer reactions far from thermodynamic equilibrium. In this talk, Paul Falkowski will discuss the possibility that photobiochemical reactions of minerals were transformational in the origins and persistence of biologically catalyzed electron transfer reactions on Earth.

Genomics in Single Cells and Microbiomes

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

Speakers: Curtis Huttenhower, Aviv Regev, Dana Pe’er, Michael Schatz Curtis Huttenhower High-precision Functional Profiling of Microbial Communities and the Human Microbiome https://vimeo.com/125281142 Aviv Regev Towards a Human Cell Atlas https://vimeo.com/125270869...

Reproducible Research and the Common Task Method

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

In this lecture, Mark Liberman will describe the origins and development of the ‘Common Task’ method in DARPA’s human language technology program, its broader influence on recent research and development practices, and its lessons for the future.

Imaging as Exploration

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

Advanced data generation capabilities require other enhanced abilities — with increasing data size and complexity, the development of more efficient acquisition and analysis methods is essential. In this lecture, Lawrence R. Frank will discuss how this new paradigm of imaging exploration is manifest.

Illuminating Biology at the Nanoscale with Super-Resolution Florescence Microscopy

Stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (STORM), breaks the diffraction limit on light microscopy by using selective activation of photo-switchable fluorescent probes to temporally separate the spatially overlapping images of individual molecules. This approach has allowed multicolor and 3-D imaging of living cells with nanometer-scale resolution, enabling discoveries of novel sub-cellular structures. In this talk, Prof. Zhuang will discuss her group's development of STORM and its biological applications.

Extra-Solar Planets: Search, Characterization and Population Inferences

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

David W. Hogg will explore how planets are discovered in the Kepler dataset, how the data are understood and how researchers can make inferences about the full population of planets in the galaxy.

Solving the 3-D Puzzle of Rotation Assignment in Single Particle Cryo-Electron Microscopy

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

This lecture will explore algorithms for estimating the unknown pose parameters. The main focus will be on algorithms that are based on semidefinite programming relaxations that can be viewed as extensions to existing approximation algorithms to max-cut and unique games, two fundamental problems in theoretical computer science.

Visualizing Quantum Matter

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

Everything around us — everything each of us has ever experienced and virtually everything underpinning our technological society and economy — is governed by quantum mechanics. Yet this most fundamental physical theory of nature often feels like a set of somewhat eerie and counterintuitive ideas of no direct relevance to our lives. Why is this? One reason is that we cannot perceive the strangeness (and astonishing beauty) of the quantum mechanical phenomena all around us by using our own senses.

Harnessing Hippocampal Stem Cells to Improve Mood and Cognition

Recent studies have implicated adult-born hippocampal neurons in pattern separation, a process by which similar experiences or events are transformed into discrete non-overlapping representations. Impaired pattern separation, Dr. Hen proposes, underlies the overgeneralization often seen in age-related memory impairments and in anxiety disorders. Dr. Hen will present evidence that strategies aimed at stimulating hippocampal neurogenesis result in improved pattern separation.

Timing Mechanisms of Critical Periods in Brain Development

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

This lecture explores the biological bases of critical periods in brain development. Mechanisms that open and close windows of plasticity (E/I balance and molecular brakes, respectively) are implicated in autism, suggesting mistimed maturational processes that can be strategically rescued at the circuit level.

What Do Animals Really Learn? Adventures of Reinforcement Learning in the Real World

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

In this lecture, Yael Niv will argue that the key to learning efficiently in real-world scenarios is to use a simplified representation of the task that includes only those dimensions of the environment that are relevant to obtaining reward.

2015 MPS Annual Meeting

Thursday, October 22nd – Friday, October 23rd, 2015 Download the 2015 Annual Meeting booklet (PDF). The Mathematics and Physical Sciences Annual Meeting gathered together Simons Investigators, Simons Fellows, Simons Society...

Molecular and Neural Architecture of Circuits Underlying Social Behavior in the Mouse

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

In this lecture, Catherine Dulac will discuss the cellular and molecular architecture of neural circuits underlying instinctive social behaviors of mice. She will describe her group’s recent advances in uncovering the identity of sensory neurons that detect social cues and the identity of command circuits associated with specific social responses in male and female mice.

Clinical and translational genomics

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

This Biotech Symposium will focus on clinical and translational genomics and the shift to precision medicine.

Understanding the Relationship Between Genes and Social Behavior: Lessons from the Honey Bee

The study of genes and social behavior is still a young field. In this lecture, Gene E. Robinson will discuss some of the first insights to emerge that describe the relationship between them. These include the surprisingly close relationship between brain gene expression and specific behavioral states; social regulation of brain gene expression; control of social behavior by context-dependent rewiring of brain transcriptional regulatory networks; and evolutionarily conserved genetic toolkits for social behavior that span insects, fish and mammals.

Storming the Ivory Tower: How to Make Autism Interventions Work in Schools

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

In this lecture, David S. Mandell will talk about why autism interventions rarely are implemented in community practice and why they fail to achieve the same outcomes as those observed in clinical trials.

Patterns in the Primes

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

Prime numbers have intrigued mathematicians, amateur and professional alike, for thousands of years. Some of the most pertinent questions today probably stem from classical times. In this lecture, Dr. Granville will discuss some well-known patterns in the primes and explain some of the latest progress.

Quarks, Flux Tubes and String Theory Without Calculus

The theory of strings started as an attempt to describe the forces holding quarks together. Important remnants of that idea survive in the form of the flux tubes of quantum chromodynamics and...

Atom-interferometry Limits on Dark Energy

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

In this lecture, Dr. Holger Müller will explain recent experimental searches for certain models of dark energy. How can it be that dark energy, which is supposedly ubiquitous in the cosmos, has never been observed in experiments?

A Molecular Geneticist’s Approach to Understanding the Fly Brain

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

In this lecture, Gerald Rubin will discuss efforts to develop and apply the tools that will be required for a comprehensive analysis of the anatomy and function of the fly brain at the level of individual cell types and circuits, using examples from his lab’s recent work on visual perception, as well as the mechanisms of learning and memory.

The Formation of Structure in the Cosmos

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

In this lecture, Juna Kollmeier will take you on a cosmic journey, starting with the infant universe and explain the current thinking about how “structure” emerges from this humble start.

What Can Genetics Tell Us About Autism Spectrum Disorder?

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

This talk will outline the current state of genetics research in autism, highlight some of the key findings that remain to be discovered, and consider how these findings could ultimately benefit individuals with autism and their families.

Analysis of Boolean Functions (2016)

April 3-9, 2016   Organizers: Krzysztof Oleskiewicz, University of Warsaw Elchanan Mossel, University of Pennsylvania Ryan O’Donnell, Carnegie Mellon University Related Links: Discrete Analysis: Beyond the Boolean Cube (2014) Analysis...

Geometric Aspects of the Trace Formula (2016)

April 10-16, 2016   Organizers: Werner Mueller, Mathematisches Institut der Universität Bonn Sug Woo Shin, UC Berkeley Nicolas Templier, Cornell University Related Links: Geometric Aspects of the Trace Formula (external...

Einstein’s Blunder Undone

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

In this talk, Robert Kirshner will show how we discovered cosmic acceleration and present evidence that we live in a universe that is only 4 percent ordinary matter, with the balance being dark matter and dark energy.

Geometry Over Nonclosed Fields (2016)

April 17-23, 2016   Organizers: Fedor Bogomolov, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences Brendan Hassett, Brown University Yuri Tschinkel, Simons Foundation Related Links: 2012 Simons Symposium on Geometry Over Nonclosed Fields...

Integrability and Universality in Probability

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

In this lecture, Alexei Borodin will illustrate how these two concepts work together in examples from random matrices to random interface growth.

Universality Phenomena in Machine Learning, and Their Applications

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

A canonical task in machine learning is to fit a model to a dataset. Sanjeev Arora will describe models fitted to real-life datasets, which display randomlike properties that can offer insights into the algorithms used for the task.

Imaging Life at High Spatiotemporal Resolution

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

In this lecture, Eric Betzig will describe advanced optical tools being developed to help scientists delve deeper into the complexity of biological systems.

Metagenomic DNA Sequencing to Detect and Diagnose Infections

Gerald D. Fischbach Auditorium 160 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States

Next-generation sequencing has the power to decode DNA in a matter of hours, but doctors still diagnose infections using methods developed decades ago. This lecture will describe how scientists are using the latest sequencing technology in combination with new, very fast algorithms to sequence a complex mixture of DNA from a sick patient and, in some cases, identify the causative agent of an infection.


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