Madison
Chaos and Complex Systems Seminar
Fall 2007 Seminars
All seminars are Tuesday at 12:05 pm in 4274 Chamberlin except as
noted. Refreshments will be served
Short List
- Sep 4, 2007 - Colin Dewey, Biostatistics
- Sep 11, 2007 - Alfonso Morales, Sociology
- Sep 18, 2007 - Tim Allen, Botany
- Sep 25, 2007 - John Young, AOS
- Oct 2, 2007 - Robin Chapman, Communicative Disorders
- Oct 9, 2007 - Warren Porter, Zoology
- Oct 16, 2007 - Russ Gardner, Psychiatry
- Oct 23, 2007 - Rogers Hollingsworth, History and Sociology
- Oct 30, 2007 - Tom Sharkey, Botany
- Nov 6, 2007 - Jim Crow, Genetics
- Nov 13, 2007 - Moe
Hirsch, Mathematics
- Nov 20, 2007 - Snezana Stanimirovic, Astronomy
- Nov 27, 2007 - Dick Burgess, Oncology
- Dec 4, 2007 - Tim Rogers, Psychology
- Dec 11, 2007 - Paul Barford, Computer Science
Abstracts
September 4, 2007
On the complexity of the human genome: new insights from the ENCODE
project
Colin Dewey, UW Department of Biostatistics
It has been six years since
the human genome was first sequenced, yet we are still in the early stages
of determining the biological role of
each of its roughly three billion nucleotides. The pilot phase of the
Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) project, a large international effort to construct
a catalog of all functional elements
in
the human genome, has recently concluded and revealed that genomic biology is more
complex than previously thought. In this
talk,
I will report on the major findings of the ENCODE project thus far and present an up-to-date
picture of how the genome functions.
I
will argue that people need to stop the liberal use of the phrase �junk DNA,� as the
majority of the genome is at least transcribed
into
RNA. The fundamental tenets of comparative genomics will also be challenged with the
project�s finding that the correlation
between
evolutionary constraint and function is not so strong. The human genome is
looking more and more like an incredibly complex
and random system, our understanding of which will require many more years of challenging
research.
September 11, 2007
Making order in the market
Alfonso Morales, UW Department of Sociology, Urban
and Regional Planning
In this talk, I will
discuss how merchants at Maxwell Street Market created social order in the
absence of workable legal expectations. Originally
vending space, the heart of social order in this Market, was allocated by a Market Master. In
1973 the last Master died and was not replaced.
Instead the City of Chicago imposed unworkable ordinances and temporarily the Market
disintegrated into the stereotypical street market, a lawless, chaotic, and dangerous
place. But, to the surprise of many the heterogeneous merchant population
swiftly brought order by creating stable,
flexible
and durable mechanisms for allocating vending spaces. I will describe the remarkably
stable and flexible methods of allocating vending
space that evolved in the absence of the leviathan, City government.
September 18, 2007
Chaos, Schrodinger's Cat, and the Uncertainty principle engage
because they are narratives, and that's how humans think
Tim Allen, UW Department of Botany
Chaos theory has a surprising
following (e.g. in Jurassic Park). Not as big in popular culture, but still
iconic, are the uncertainty principle, and Schrodinger's cat. All three
fit easily into the narrative posture. Models must be internally
consistent but narratives do not. What makes us
humans so distinctive is the way we can jump from continuous to discrete and from reversible to
irreversible in all combinations without losing coherence. We tell stories
to map the impossible into a context that
feels right. Representational models fix to a point and give the state.
Experimental analogues map to 1st derivatives and are compressions. 2nd derivatives
indicate the interaction with the context. Narratives
tell only of what matters, and so are representations of compressions in a context. So it
follows that attractors are the narratives
of
the observable. For a chaotic strange attractor, the story never ends, but we soon
recognize what it is.
September 25, 2007
Global climate change: Current scientific views
John Young, UW Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
Climate change science has been growing rapidly in sophistication
and conclusiveness. This talk will focus on highlights of the
current scientific evidence for human-induced climate change, the
understanding of that change, and predicted scenarios of future
change. The material is based primarily upon six years of
international efforts summarized in the 2007 report of the IPCC
(Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change).
Future directions will increasingly include many new dimensions:
applied and interdisciplinary studies addressing regional climate
change, its local impacts on human activity, assessment of
vulnerability, adaptation and mitigation strategies. A variety of
University of Wisconsin researchers will collaborate in these
efforts in the coming decades. Stay tuned.
October 2, 2007
Language development in children and adolescents with Down syndrome
Robin Chapman, UW Department of Communicative Disorders
Research on language development in individuals with developmental
disabilities can illuminate fundamental issues in our theories of
language development. Is language acquisition modular or
interactive? Are there critical periods for the acquisition of
syntax? Our work shows that a specific pattern of language
development can be found in children with Down syndrome, that
individual variation is traceable to general learning and short-term
memory mechanisms, and that language comprehension and production
diverge in ways consistent with interactive, emergentist theories of
language acquisition and continued language learning of complex
syntax in adolescence. Factors improving fast mapping of new
vocabulary and storytelling are also reviewed.
This talk is available as a PowerPoint
presentation.
October 9, 2007
Low dose effects of pesticide mixtures on
neurological, endocrine, immune function and developmental
processes (not hormesis).
Warren Porter, UW Department of
Zoology
Endocrinologists in the 1960s knew that over
narrow parts per billion and parts per trillion ranges of
concentration hormones could have potent effects on the body. Outside that range there is typically no
effect. Hormones communicate with the nervous system and the
immune system in at least 50 different ways.
Thus, agents in the environment that impact any one of
those three systems are likely to impact the other two. I will describe data showing how current
exposure levels may be impacting animal and human learning
abilities, birth defects, endocrine and immune functions. These impacts can come from
environmental contaminants introduced into our waters and
foodstuffs at environmentally relevant concentrations.
October 16, 2007
The temporal lobe push theory of artistic zeal and religious
experience
Russell Gardner, Jr., UW Department of Psychiatry
Temporal lobe epilepsy has been diagnosed in many artists and
religious figures. The interictal characteristics of more usual such
patients often include such features as religiosity (with frequent
experience of religious awe) and hypergraphia (incessant writing
with pleasure in the act of doing so). Some artists exhibit
variants, for example, Van Gogh. Triggering of manic episodes can
occur with temporal lobe disturbances. The temporal lobe push theory
hinges on the idea that people without seizures may nonetheless
possess non-clinical variations of these attributes. This does not
"reduce" artistic and religious experience to temporal lobe
pathology but rather to suggest that normal variants of activity in
the medial temporal lobe may provide an alphabet to complex human
experience. As one non-epileptic artist suggested hearing these
ideas, "Oh, I guess I have pushy temporal lobes!"
October 23, 2007
Research organizations, major discoveries, and the performance of
the American system of science
Rogers Hollingsworth, UW Departments of History and Sociology
The lecture will present three interrelated themes: (1) It will
discuss the characteristics of research organizations and their
laboratories as well as the traits of individual scientists which
are associated with the making of major scientific discoveries. (2)
The lecture will emphasize that there are sharply decreasing returns
to the investments in science and technology relative to the making
of major discoveries. (3) The lecture will conclude with several
suggestions for improving the conditions for the making of
fundamental discoveries in American society.
The data set for the lecture involves many years of research about
more than 750 research organizations in Britain, France, Germany, and the United States;
and approximately 2100 laboratories. It is based on an analysis of
291 major discoveries; in-depth interviews with more than 560
scientists, administrators, and officers of major funding agencies
on both sides of the Atlantic; and
archival research. The research focuses on the characteristics of
research organizations and laboratories where major discoveries
occur and do not occur.
October 30, 2007
The challenges of stabilizing photosynthetic reactions
Tom Sharkey, UW Department of Botany
Photosynthesis is the source of essentially all metabolic energy
used by living organisms. A number of factors make control of
photosynthetic reactions particularly challenging. In human
metabolism, the input of energy is highly controlled (consider the
controls on the supply of glucose in the blood). Similarly, the
environment of the metabolic reactions is strictly controlled
(consider the narrow range of temperature over which human metabolic
reactions occur). Photosynthesis happens in leaves, which are
optimized for solar collection, leaving them with little capacity to
buffer changes in inputs or in the environment in which the
metabolism occurs. Intuitive examples include sunflecks, which can
occur in the understory of a forest or on a partly cloudy day. The
energy input (sunlight) varies rapidly by several orders of
magnitude dozens or even hundreds of times per day. The environment
can also change, with leaf temperature changing by over 10�C
with a characteristic time constant of 20 seconds. Photosynthetic
metabolic reactions are essentially unbuffered. Human muscles have
enough of the energy molecule ATP to last just 20 seconds, but a
photosynthesizing leaf has only enough for 100 milliseconds. Other
metabolites turn over even faster. On top of this, photosynthesis
control usually exists in one of two states corresponding roughly
(but not precisely) to the concept of light versus dark reactions.
As inputs and environment change, photosynthesis will flip between
these two control states with almost no intermediate, shared control
state. These challenges are met with a large number of control
mechanisms. However, the metabolic control signals most often
considered, changes in metabolite cascading through a pathway, seems
to play at most a minor role. The major components of photosynthetic
metabolism have mechanisms for rapid disengagement so that all
components can safely go at the rate of the slowest component. The
result is rapid adjustment of photosynthesis to changing conditions
with just one, relatively rare, state being prone to oscillations.
November 6, 2007
Age and sex effects on human mutation rates: An old problem with a
curious new wrinkle
Jim Crow, UW Department of Genetics
It has been known for decades that the human mutation rate is higher
in males than females and
increases with paternal age. This is readily
explained
by the greater number of cell divisions ancestral to a sperm than to an egg and the
increased number of divisions if the
male
is old. This is true for base-substitution mutations, but not for small insertions and
deletions (indels), which are essentially
independent
of age and sex. The relation between sex and age therefore differs for
different mutations, depending on the size of
the indel component.
Three loci (and probably more) produce mutations that are almost entirely paternal and with a sharp
age increase. I'll discuss evidence
for
a quite different, and surprising explanation that may have a broader significance.
Finally I hope to say a bit about the greater accumulation of harmful mutations under the
relaxed selection in societies with a high
living standard. Is it something to worry about?
November 13, 2007
Game theory: Strategy, communication and belief
Moe Hirsch, UW Department of Mathematics
In an infinitely repeated game, each player seeks to maximize her
long-term average payoff, basing her strategy on on her
beliefs, which evolve as the game is repeated, about opponents'
payoffs, desires and strategies. Steve Smale devised a strategy for
repeated Prisoner's Dilemma (or "Arms Race") which, if adopted by
one player, will induce rational, non-greedy opponents to play
strategies that achieve long-run mutual satisfaction. In many games
a very different probabilistic strategy called "fictitious play"
leads to ultimate convergence to a Nash equilibrium (undesirable in
PD), even though players are acting on false beliefs (which in the
long run become true). I will try to present these results with a
minimum of technicalities.
November 20, 2007
The dynamic and multi-scale diffuse interstellar medium in the
Galaxy
Snezana Stanimirovic, UW Department of Astronomy
The interstellar medium (ISM) is the matter which occupies the
enormous volume between stars. It consists mainly of gas and dust
particles. At a scientific symposium in 1977, astrophysicist George
Herbig said: "Let me say at first, rather naively, how struck I am
by the delicate symbiosis that exists between the stars and the
interstellar medium, how each is nourished by the other, and how the
Galaxy as we know is entirely a consequence of that balance and
interplay". It is this fascinating interplay between stars and the
ISM that also provides constant energy input, making the ISM highly
structured and dynamic.
The interstellar gas in the ISM possesses an extremely wide range of
physical properties, and is versatile in 'structures' over a wide
range of spatial scales. By imaging the 21-cm emission line of
neutral hydrogen with radio telescopes we can study the inventory
and properties of the diffuse ISM. Recent studies are revealing an
astonishing inhomogeneity of the ISM, with many levels of hierarchy,
a picture very different from the traditional two-level hierarchical
system consisting of clouds uniformly dispersed in the intercloud
medium.
In this talk, I will summarize the basic properties of the ISM and
attempt to explore what can be learnt if we treat the ISM as a
complex system.
November 27, 2007
Protein biotechnology; The problem of refolding proteins
Richard Burgess, UW Department of Oncology
Modern molecular biology and genetic engineering has given us the ability with relatively ease to
clone any gene from any organism and to design a recombinant bacterial strain
that can be used to produce in unlimited quantities the protein
corresponding to that gene. Such proteins (often enzymes)
can be used in basic research, as ways of treating human disease,
and in industrial processes.
However, when one produces a large amount of a given protein in a bacterial host, it is
very often found that the protein is insoluble
and inactive. In theory, one can isolate this insoluble protein, solubilize
it in a chemical denaturing agent that unfolds the protein, and then remove the denaturant,
allowing the protein to refold into its native, active form. It is thought that
the amino acid sequence of the protein determines the most stable
refolding state. However, a major problem exists in finding the optimal conditions
to allow the protein to refold efficiently. My lab
has developed methods to carry out this refolding with a high degree
of success.
I will discuss why producing proteins is important, the nature of the refolding problem (the nearly
infinite possible ways a protein can fold) and how we have at least partially
solved the problem.
December 4, 2007
Learning conceptual representations from perceptual inputs
Tim Rogers, UW Department of Psychology
Over the first year of life,
infants gain conceptual skills that allow them
to construe semantically related items as similar, even when they have few if any directly-perceived
attributes in common. Moreover, this skill
first
encompasses quite broad semantic categories, and only later extends to more subtle
distinctions, when conceptual and perceptual similarity
relations do not coincide. I will describe a simple computational mechanism that
illustrates how such conceptual change is possible. In agreement with many
others, I will suggest that early-developing
conceptual
representations are organized with respect to certain especially useful or
salient properties, regardless of whether
such
properties can be directly observed. In contrast to other views, I will argue that in many
cases this salience may itself be acquired,
through
a domain-general learning mechanism that is sensitive to the high-order coherent
covariation of directly-observed stimulus properties
across a breadth of experience. To support this argument I will describe simulations with a
simple parallel-distributed-processing (PDP) model of semantic memory.
When trained with backpropagation to complete
queries about the properties of different objects, the model�s internal
representations show a nonlinear, coarse-to-fine pattern of differentiation. As a consequence,
different sets of properties come to be
especially
�salient� to the model at different points during development�so that objects
sharing such properties are represented as similar
even if they differ in many other respects. These dynamics provide a basis for understanding
conceptual change generally, and more specifically, for understanding
developmental change in the meanings of words.
December 11, 2007
The Internet threat landscape and what we can do about it
Paul Barford, UW Department of Computer Science
Attacks and intrusions in the Internet are a significant problem,
causing damages estimated in the billions of dollars.
Furthermore, the emerging underground economy based on malicious
activity is fueling increased sophistication and organization among
malicious parties. In this talk, I will describe the basic
mechanisms for cyber attacks and how they are used in viruses,
worms, pfishing, spyware and the latest and most serious threat --
distributed botnets. I will also describe the basic mechanisms
for cyber security aimed at reducing the attack surface of cyber
infrastructure and providing comprehensive information about
malicious activity. Unfortunately, the lack of intrinsic
security mechanisms and the inherent imbalance between the
objectives of attackers and defenders places defenders at a
significant disadvantage. However, there is hope that new
security technologies, including those developed at UW-Madison will
significantly narrow this gap.