Seminars and Events at automatic control
All seminars are held at the Department of Automatic Control, in the seminar room M 3170-73 on the third floor in the M-building, unless stated otherwise.
How Networks Work
Konferens
From:
2025-05-27 09:30
to
15:30
Place: M:Teknodromen, M-building LTH, Klas Anshelms väg 6 / Ole Römers väg 1, Lund, Sweden
Contact: Jonas [dot] Wisbrant [at] control [dot] lth [dot] se
Fika-to fika workshop by Lund University Profile Area Natural and Artificial Cognition.
Networks are ubiquitous in both nature and technology, spanning scales from the microscopic to the macroscopic. Examples include metabolic and gene expression networks within cells, neural and vascular networks, traffic and social networks, and electric power distribution grids. The study of network dynamics has emerged as a key paradigm in understanding complex systems. Networks are analyzed using techniques from various scientific disciplines, making them an ideal focal point for interdisciplinary research.
This one day (“fika-to-fika”) workshop brings together researchers from across the NAC Plane* who are working on network-related topics. It will include experts on modeling power-supply systems, social networks, neuroscience, biology, biomedicine, as well as investigators researching network theory and network dynamics in general.
When: 27 May 2024 at 9.30 to 15.30
Where: M:Teknodromen in M-building, Klas Anshelms väg 6 / Ole Römers väg 1, Lund, Sweden
Primary audience researchers (estimate: 50-90 attendants)
To participate is free of charge. Sign up for participation at ai.lu.se/2025-05-27/registration
Programme outline - preliminar
9.30: Check-in, coffee
10.00 Morning session
10.00-10.10 Welcome & introduction
10.10 Keynote: Petter Holme, Professor, Department of Computer Science, Aalto University
11:00 Lightning talks
11.30 Interactive session
12.00-13.00: Lunch sandwich / mingle
13.10 Afternoon session
13.10: Keynote 2: Kim Sneppen, Professor, Niels Bohr Institute, Biocomplexity; Copenhagen University
14.00 Lightning talks
14.30 Group discussion
15.00 Summary
15.15 - 15.45: Coffee / mingle
Organisation
The workshop is organised by the Lund University Profile Area Natural and Artificial Cognition
- Erik A. Martens, Senior lecturer, Applied Mathematics, Lund University
- Emma Tegling, Senior lecturer, Automatic Control, Lund University
- Richard Pates, Senior lecturer, Automatic Control, Lund University
- Pär Halje, Integrative Neurophysiology Lund University, Lund University
- Jonas Wisbrant, Natural and Artificial Cognition and AI Lund
* The NAC plane is one of several ways to try to span and describe the research within Lund University's profile area for natural and artificial cognition (NAC). Imagine a two-dimensional matrix in which one axis (often y) you have the concepts of artificial and natural cognition, i.e. different artificial or biological cognitive and more or less autonomous agents or systems. On the other axis (often x) you have how many such agents or systems you want to study, one by one, two by two, or many; sometimes very many, such as brain cells or nodes on the Internet. Research on humans interacting with robots ends up in the middle of the matrix.
If you have read to here and want to know more about Lund University's profile area for natural and artificial cognition, you will find the researchers and much of our research on https://portal.research.lu.se/ :-)