Madison
Chaos and Complex Systems Seminar
Fall 2010 Seminars
All seminars are Tuesday at 12:05 pm in 4274 Chamberlin except as
noted. Refreshments will be served
Short List
- Sep 7, 2010 - Vicki Bier, Industrial Engineering
- Sep 14, 2010 - Tracey Holloway, AOS
- Sep 21, 2010 - Michael Allen, Physics Dept, Mahidol
University, Bangkok, Thailand
- Sep 28, 2010 - Bharathwaj "Bart" Muthuswamy, ECE, MSOE
- Oct 5, 2010 - Thomas L Eggert, Business
- Oct 12, 2010 - Jim Pawley, Zoology
- Oct 19, 2010 - Tom Yin, Physiology
- Oct 26, 2010 - Andrea Gargas, Symbiology LLC
- Nov 2, 2010 - John Young, Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
- Nov 9, 2010 - Bernard Z. Friedlander, Psychology
- Nov 16, 2010 - Jacquelyn Gill, Geography
- Nov 23, 2010 - Jim Blair, Milton College, Emeritus
- Nov 30, 2010 - Ned Sibert, Chemistry
- Dec 7, 2010 - Russell Gardner, Psychiatry
- Dec 14, 2010 - Dave Hart, Civil and Environmental Engineering
Abstracts
September 7, 2010
Looking for the next Black Swan instead of chasing the last one
Vicki Bier, UW Department of Industrial Engineering
Topics to be addressed:
How to anticipate low-probability events that are not currently
getting attention.
How to get organizations to take high-impact, low-probability events
seriously.
What to do about high-impact, low-probability events once an
organization decides to take action.
This talk is available as a PowerPoint
Presentation.
September 14, 2010
Designing climate change solutions
Tracey Holloway, UW Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
Climate change is affected by almost every sector of the economy and
society (transportation, electricity, consumption, food,
agriculture, land use, manufacturing, etc.). Similarly, the
impacts of climate change affect these same systems (extreme
weather, seasonal shifts, agricultural vulnerability,
infrastructure, public health, coastal areas, etc.). So, the options
for mitigating � reducing emissions of CO2 and other
greenhouse gases � or adapting � reducing vulnerability of
systems � are almost limitless. For the third year in a row,
the SAGE (the Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment
in the Nelson Institute) hosts the largest student environmental
innovation competition in the world: the Climate Leadership
Challenge (CLC). The CLC focuses on innovative, scaleable solutions
to climate change. In 2011, the CLC will again be awarding a $50,000
grand prize to a student team interested in advancing a climate
solution. This talk will discuss climate change mitigation and
adaptation broadly, success stories, and opportunities for students
to compete this year.
September 21, 2010
Dynamics of agents repeatedly facing alternatives
Michael Allen, Physics Dept, Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand
We have been examining the dynamics of agents who repeatedly face a
fixed set of alternatives. The agents could, for example, be
commuters with a choice of routes or departure times. The
choice the agents make each time is determined by the number of
agents that made the same choice on the previous occasion. The
decision process is determined by means of a satisfaction function
which gives the number of agents that make the same choice on the
following occasion. For most of the satisfaction functions we have
looked at, the system settles down to either a steady state or
periodic oscillations, but in some cases we find chaos.
September 28, 2010
Simplest chaotic circuit
Bharathwaj Muthuswamy, Department of Electrical Engineering,
Milwaukee School of Engineering
A chaotic attractor has been observed with an autonomous circuit
that uses only two energy-storage elements: a linear passive
inductor and a linear passive capacitor. The other element is a
nonlinear active memristor. Hence the circuit has only three circuit
elements in series.We discuss this circuit topology, show several
attractors and illustrate local activity via the memristor's DC v-i characteristic.
October 5, 2010
Sustainability: The lay of the land for 2010
Thomas L Eggert, UW School of Business
Tom Eggert is the Co-Director of the Business, Environment &
Social Responsibility Program at the WI School of Business, and also
is the Executive Director of the WI Sustainable Business Council.
His talk will focus on the adoption of "green" or sustainable
practices by institutions throughout the state.
This talk is available as a PowerPoint
Presentation.
October 12, 2010
Climate, energy, and the economy: A new Theory of Everything.
Jim Pawley, UW Department of Zoology
During the industrial revolution, science gained a reputation for
mathematical accuracy and precision. Scientific models were
effective at predicting the performance of simple systems, from
those that spun and wove to those that created the worldwide web.
Less appreciated was the fact that these technologies worked ONLY
because, during this same period, humankind had also acquired access
to a new and immense store of controllable energy. Instead, we were
taught that these riches were due to increases in "economic
efficiency" and, like the sciences, economics promised a future that
was both predictable and bright.
Then a few decades ago, one scientific discipline after another
seemed to hit a wall: Although the Uncertainty Principle was at
first understood only to affect very small systems, scientists began
to realize that some uncertainty was unavoidable, and furthermore
that, as it propagates through a complex system, the errors become
so large that it is hard to have confidence in any but the broadest
of predictions: often only those emerging from thermodynamics.
We had entered the Age of Chaos. Although at first some theorists
hoped that "faster computers" might be the answer, in the end
computers merely clarified two things: 1) that large changes were
exponentially less likely than small ones and 2) that the presence
of positive feedback makes it very hard to make any confident
predictions, while the relative stability of our environment was
based on a variety of negative feedbacks. As time went on, it became
evident that most aspects of modern life, from arctic ice to
advertising, from politics to preaching and from Wall Street to war,
acted as though they too were largely chaotic.
In the real world, the one that now entirely relied on the
technology, the advent of the Age of Chaos was not much noticed.
Accurate predictions were still expected ("If we can put a man on
the Moon...") from a science that now recognized that such things
were impossible.
This was unfortunate because, over the past 2 centuries
fossil-fuel-powered technology had allowed humans and their domestic
animals to multiply until their bodies represented over 98% of the
terrestrial vertebrate biomass. More important still, acting either
directly, by producing CO2 and other gasses that affect the climate,
or indirectly, for instance by the creation of bioactive chemicals,
changes to the albedo or barriers to migration, the use of fossil
fuel had brought all of the major ecological systems (the
atmosphere, forests, oceans etc.) near to the point of collapse.
So now, when society went to science for the precise answers needed
to guide a response to these challenges, science had few simple
answers, and most of these were from from thermodynamics: There is
no free lunch. Use less energy or else.
Previous meetings of this forum have addressed many of these matters
individually or in small groups. I have the feeling that the fact
that so many of these essential but chaotic and interacting factors
are approaching a critical point simultaneously adds an additional
level of concern. Perhaps we can use what we have learned about
chaotic systems to improve the odds? I hope to get some ideas. Or
perhaps to raise the threat level...
This talk is available as a PDF document.
October 19, 2010
What do the ears do?
Tom Yin, UW Department of Psysiology
Of course most people
would answer the question in the title by saying that we use our
ears to hear sounds. However, if we restrict �ear� to refer to the
external ears, or pair of protuberances on either side of our head
(which is the common casual meaning of the word), then the question
becomes more difficult to answer. In this talk I will explore the
function of the external ears, or pinnae. I will show evidence that
the pinnae play an important, and counter-intuitive, role in sound
localization. Furthermore, little is known about how animals with
mobile pinnae use their ear movements. I will discuss our behavioral
experiments in cats in which we have measured movements of the
pinnae and discovered a new reflex, which we call the
vestibulo-auricular reflex (VAR), that is hypothesized to help the
cat maintain a stable acoustic space in the face of head movements.
October 26, 2010
Bat White-Nose Syndrome and Geomyces destructans
Andrea Gargas, Symbiology LLC
Bats in Eastern North America are at risk of extinction within the
next few years. White-Nose Syndrome (WNS), is causing mortality of
nearly 100% of cave-hibernating bats. Since first detected in bats
near Albany, NY in 2007, WNS has been confirmed in 10 additional
U.S. states and two Canadian provinces, leading to the deaths of
over one million bats. We isolated and described a new species of
cold-loving fungus that causes the hallmark skin infection of WNS,
naming it Geomyces destructans. We developed PCR primers to search
for the DNA signature of G. destructans in association with bat skin
or environmental samples. Currently we are analyzing DNA sequences
taken from cave sediments collected both inside and outside the
region of known WNS occurrence to refine the identification of G.
destructans among other cave-dwelling microbes.
November 2, 2010
Water: Wild card in the chaotic climate system
John Young, UW Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
Water is an active participant in the workings of the climate system
and its changes. This will be an illustrated overview of the basics,
illustrated with maps and satellite imagery.
All three phases of water are important: ice and clouds reflect
sunlight, and water vapor (humidity) is an effective greenhouse gas
which absorbs and emits infrared energy (as do clouds). These
climate processes contain feedbacks which vary with the patterns of
ocean, land, and daily weather. It is believed that regional climate
warming is enhanced by greenhouse warming associated with increased
water vapor.
For weather patterns, the latent heat of condensation (e.g.,
conversion of humidity to clouds and rain) is a strong positive
feedback which increases the chaos of weather systems such as
thunderstorms, hurricanes, and larger systems. Hence, the dynamic
elements of the water cycle link weather, climate, its changes, and
its predictability.
November 9, 2010
How people get the way we are--A Table of
Elements: Chaos, complex systems and conflict in human
development
Bernard Z. Friedlander, UW-Madison Faculty, 1967-70; Research
Professor of Human Development, Emeritus, University of Hartford,
West Hartford, CT
The presentation consists of four connected Parts--
1. Chaos, Complex Systems and Conflict�The Name
of the Game
2. Our Habitat: The Absolute Context of Human
Behavior
3. New Paradigms for Thinking About Human
Behavior, Self, and Consciousness
4. Are New Modes of Adaptation Possible in Our
New Human Habitat?
November 16, 2010
Jacquelyn Gill, UW Department of Geography
Climatic and megaherbivory controls on late-glacial vegetation:
Linking the end-Pleistocene extinctions to novel plant communities
and enhanced fire regimes
Vegetation assemblages from the Pleistocene-Holocene
transition in Midwestern North America (17-11 ka) are
compositionally unlike any found today, a feature long recognized by
Quaternary paleoecologists. These �no-analog� communities have been
attributed to increased climatic seasonality and moisture, though
recent work suggests that the Pleistocene megafaunal extinction
coincided with and may have contributed to these novel assemblages.
The role of Pleistocene megaherbivores in shaping late-glacial
vegetation change is largely unknown, due to dating uncertainties
and the poor spatiotemporal and taxonomic resolution of fossil bone
data. Spores of the dung fungus Sporormiella, which are preserved in
lake sediments, can be directly compared with fossil pollen and
charcoal data, potentially recording the ecological context and the
consequences of megafaunal population collapse.
At Appleman Lake, IN, the coincidence of the Sporormiella decline,
the rise in deciduous broadleaved pollen types, and a large peak in
sedimentary charcoal suggests that keystone megaherbivores may have
altered ecosystem structure and function through 1) the release of
palatable hardwoods from herbivory pressure and 2) a shift in fire
regimes due to increased fuel loads. Additional records are needed
to assess the spatiotemporal pattern of the Sporormiella decline,
whether it is a qualitative or quantitative proxy for megafaunal
abundance, and whether Sporormiella is consistently associated with
increases in the pollen abundances of broadleaved deciduous taxa. I
propose a hierarchy of controls on late-glacial plant communities,
with climatically-limited species distributions potentially modified
by megaherbivore activity. This talk will report paleoecological
data from Appleman Lake, preliminary results from other sites in the
no-analog region of late-glacial Eastern North America, and a modern
process study of Sporormiella and bison at Konza Prairie, Kansas.
November 23, 2010
How drifting continents jumped from fringe to core
Jim Blair, Milton College, Emeritus
A. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions: two models of how
new theories are accepted by the scientific community.
B. How Continental Drift became Plate Tectonics and was elevated
from a fringe idea in the company of Atlantis, ancient aliens &
flying saucers, to become the Fundamental Core of Geology in the
company of the Atomic Theory, the Periodic Table of the
Elements, Evolution, and the Big Bang.
C. Cataclysmic Events and Uniformitarianism, Asteroids and
Dinosaurs, Creationism and Evolution, Frederich
Engles and Dialectics, and Punctuated Equilibrium.
November 30, 2010
Why does a molecular spectroscopist care about chaos?
Ned Sibert, UW Department of Chemistry
The assignment of the
individual lines in a molecular spectra allows chemists to gain
insights into the dynamics that occurs upon laser excitation. At low
energies, where the underlying classical dynamics of the molecular
vibrations is regular, this assignment is relatively
straightforward. At higher energies, however, the underlying
classical dynamics explores larger regions of phase space and may be
chaotic. If this occurs, spectra may be intrinsically unassignable
and alternative methods for assignment must be explored. In this
talk, I will review research in this area and then describe some
intriguing features of quantum localization due to interference of
homoclinic circuits.
December 7, 2010
Two modes of social behavior
Russell Gardner, Jr., M.D., UW Department of Psychiatry
Forty years ago ethologists Chance and Jolly delineated two modes of
group interactive behavior in monkey populations, showing dramatic
species-differences. Chance later emphasized that the dichotomy
pertains to human populations as well (stemming less from
genome-determination). This presentation reviews his work, that of
others, and implications for human organizational behavior. For
instance, observers of business independently noted parallel
characteristics of group interaction and have delineated
implications for productivity.
Both �agonic� and �hedonic� modes cohere groups but in opposite
ways: agonic mode deploys clear hierarchies including punishment,
sometimes with tension, whereas those in hedonic mode exhibit
affiliation and the observer may discern any hierarchy with
difficulty. Chance who died a decade ago had fostered a small
international group centered in the UK (Birmingham Society); a
related society more focused on facets of psychopathology centered
in the US elected him as its first president (Across-Species
Comparisons and Psychopathology). I will report on the September 4,
2010, London meeting of the Birmingham group.
Ref: Social groups of monkeys,
apes and men, by Michael R. A. Chance and Clifford J.
Jolly, London: Cape, 1970
December 14, 2010
Earthquakes in Wisconsin-Why so few and far between?
Dave Hart, Wisconsin
Geological and Natural History Survey
Wisconsin
has
had
only
around 18 recorded earthquakes in the last 120 years with none
greater than magnitude 4. In contrast, earthquakes are more common
in other Midwestern states. Illinois has had 23 earthquakes in the
last 20 years with magnitudes between 3 and 5. The area around New
Madrid, Missouri has numerous earthquakes, 50 within the last 6
months, and was the location of some of the largest earthquakes to
occur in the U.S. Three earthquakes of magnitude 8 occurred there
during the winter of 1811-1812.
What is different about
Wisconsin? Is it the stress field or is it the geology that makes
earthquakes less common here. In this presentation, we examine a few
responses to those questions. We�ll also see a short demonstration
of the non-linearity of earthquakes using a coupled slider blocks
model. This model gives insight into the difficulties of earthquake
prediction.