Life Science Lab - San Francisco Academy 2003 Proceedings (original) (raw)

Life Science Lab - San Francisco Academy 2005 Proceedings

2005

With great enthusiasm the young participants report on the Science Academy 2005 in San Francisco, which for the second time took place in this fascinating city on the West Coast of the United States. The Heidelberg Life-Science Lab is oriented along superlatives: the Bay Area not only features the highest conglomeration of bio- and hightech firms worldwide but is also attractive through its outstanding universities in Berkeley and Stanford, where excellent medical and scientific research is conducted. Extensive preparation was necessary for this ambitious project: the scientific tasks ahead were to be theoretically and practically well prepared, language training helped to improve communication skills, sponsors were sought, the trip needed to be organized – all participants experienced strenuous months requiring considerable personal initiative. We express our special gratitude to all who made this possible. In this brochure, the 17 high school graduates participating in the academy...

From Vienna to California: A journey across disciplines

Kybernetes, 2005

In 1994, while working on a collection of articles on the interaction between research in Artificial Intelligence and Cybernetics and the Humanities, Stefano Franchi and Güven Güzeldere visited Heinz von Foerster in Pescadero, California, the small town on the Pacific coast about 40 miles south of San Francisco he had settled in after retiring from the University of Illinois. There were several reasons that prompted us to seek a meeting with meet with Heinz. We both had a long-standing interest in the history of mechanized intelligence, and we shared the conviction that cybernetics, in all its different varieties, had not been given the credit it deserved by the standard accounts. We also shared the conviction that one of the most interesting aspects of Heinz von Foerster's work was his willingness to forgo disciplinary boundaries and let his research dictate the boundaries of his discipline. We felt that his radical attitude toward the vexed issue of interdisciplinarity could provide a useful perspective in a period of acknowledged stasis in Artificial Intelligence research, and we were eager to listen to a first-hand account of its benefits and perils. And last but not least, we thought that it would be improper to defy the goddess of Fortune by ignoring the opportunity she was giving us: at the time we were both at Stanford, a mere 40 minute drive from the residence of a scientist who had proved so important in the development of our field of studies and whose work had been a determinant factor in Stefano's decision to leave his home country and continue his studies in the US. Our questions were shaped by these interests, and they mostly focus on the theoretical and institutional history of Cybernetics and its often tumultuous relationship with AI. We cannot underestimate how much we learned about history and scientific methodology from that afternoon with Heinz in Pescadero and from the ensuing exchanges.

CAA'2010 Fusion of Cultures

2014

HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci-entific research documents, whether they are pub-lished or not. The documents may come from teaching and research institutions in France or abroad, or from public or private research centers. L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est destinée au dépôt et a ̀ la diffusion de documents scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires publics ou privés.

Evaluation of the California Science Project

2005

The SRI research team includes: Katherine Baisden, Christopher Chang-Ross, H. Alix Gallagher, Heather Hough, Paul Hu, Karen Hurst, Tiffany Price, Cimone Satele, Patrick Shields, Heidi Skolnik, and Juliet Tiffany-Morales. ... We would like to thank the following ...

SCIENCE WITHOUT BORDERS. Volume 4. 2019

Science Without Borders. Transactions of the International Academy of Science H&E. Vol. 4, Innsbruck, SWB, 2017/2019, 701 p., 2019

In the book are published the transactions of full members and corresponding members of the International Council For Scientific Development/International Academy of Science H&E, and the articles, presented by Academicians of ICSD/IAS H&E. The content of the book is multidisciplinary and covers the main spheres of modern natural and humanitarian sciences. During selecting the articles to the book, the special priority was given to scientific researches, which are at the joint of different sciences. This book is of interest for wide circles of scientists and students in different spheres of science.

A German-US faculty/intern exchange program in biotechnology

2002

VaNTH approach to biotechnology education to the approach of the European scientific community; (2) to expand the knowledge base of the VaNTH domain thrust in biotechnology through the expertise of the partner institutions of the German biotechnology community, and (3) to allow VaNTH and German faculty and students to experience the academic, business and cultural environments of the exchange community.

University of Michigan Undergraduate Research Forum, Issue 2, Winter 2005

2013

The UM Undergraduate Research Journal is a student-run organization dedicated to publishing multidisciplinary undergraduate research. We aim to raise awareness of the expansive breadth of work done by University of Michigan students and faculty in humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, and engineering. Our focus on multidisciplinary research is reflected by the wide array of concentrations represented by our Editorial Staff, from Aerospace Engineering to Political Science. It has been a wonderful experience working with a creative and dedicated team to publish this pamphlet. This is our first-ever 'zine', a supplement to our 7th journal issue, which comes out in April 2010. In this publication, we have focused on two relevant topics of today: issues of public health-such as swine flu-and the shifting trends of vegetarianism. On behalf of the entire UMURJ Editorial and Production staff, we would like to thank you for reading this publication. It has been a great experience putting this together, and we hope it furthers your appreciation and interest in the dynamic world of research.

Scientific American

Valencia Barcelona Lisbon Cadiz Casablanca SEEK OUT UNCHARTED TERRITORY AND REVISIT CLASSIC SCIENCE in a Western Mediterranean whirl on Bright Horizons 8. Join a cadre of experts who share critical traits -juggling the pragmatic and the possible, driven to challenge the status quo. Foster your need to know. Explore Iberia, where science went mainstream in medieval times. Venture into Casablanca with a companion, and chart the geometry of North Africa. Gravitate to a new understanding of magnetism's role in terrestrial and scienti c exploration. Absorb the cultural importance of space exploration and implications of our new comprehension of space and time. Ponder nature's preference for matter over antimatter, and the superlatives of CERN's Large Hadron Collider. Practice mind over matter thinking about the structure and function of the brain. Unfold the story behind the science with cutting edge, Nobel-grade ribosomal knowledge.