Tidligere arrangementer - Side 7
Chantale Tippett is a PhD candidate at the TIK Centre for Technology, Innovation and Culture. This seminar marks her midway evaluation.
Department seminar. Gunnar S. Eskeland is a Professor of Resource and Environmental Economics, NHH Norwegian School of Economics. He will present the paper "Moral cartels: fossil owners in a climate treaty."
The invited speaker is Ian Mills, John Black Professor of Prostate Cancer at the University of Oxford and NCMM group leader alumni. The title of his talk is: "Reflections on prostate cancer research".
Lecture by Ernils Larsson, postdoctoral research fellow at the Centre for Multidisciplinary Research on Religion and Society.
Archaeological Friday seminar with Lavinia de Ferri from the Museum of Cultural History, University of Oslo.
The African Anthropology seminar series features Anselmo Matusse, researcher at the Department of Anthropology, University of Cape Town.
Jade Sandstedt (Volda University College / University of Troms?) and Maki Kubota (University of Bergen / University of Minho) will present their study on the neurophysiological and behavioral effects of exposure to low-level sociolinguistic variation on sentence processing.
In this final seminar, Lisa Scordato will present the draft of her PhD thesis titled “Paradoxes in crisis management: a study of public sector capabilities for addressing societal crises and disasters”.
Recent experiments have shown that epithelial monolayers can behave as self-propelled solid elastic membranes, and that global directed motion (polar order) emerges through the hierarchical annihilation of contractile elastic vortices and their anti-vortices[1]. Polar ordering dynamics in fluid cell layers is often modelled by neighbour alignment (Vicsek or Vicsek like models), another model is collective flow-alignment (move in the direction of flow). Here I will discuss the differences and similarities of these two mechanisms in solids. Both can give rise to interacting elastic vortices , but one model is essentially linear, while the other is non-linear and exhibit a rich dynamics which likely is relevant to many types of biological cell layers in the solid state. [1] E. L?ng, A. L?ng, P. Blicher, T. Rognes, P.G. Dommersnes, S. O. B?e, Topology-guided polar ordering of collective cell migration, Sci. Adv. (2024)
Claudia Cicone, Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy research group, Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics.
Department seminar. Anders Midtgaard Norlyk is a PhD student at Aarhus University. He will be presenting the paper "Microstructural Foundations for Rough Noise".
By Prof. Erik Stensrud Marstein, Chief scientist PV at IFE, and Center Director FME SUSOLTECH and FME SOLAR
Fighting hunger and malnutrition in a sustainable human right perspective – quo vadis UN member states?
Celebrating the 20th Anniversary of the 2004 Voluntary Guidelines for the Right to Adequate Food in the context of national food security
Seminaret presenterer nylig avsluttede og p?g?ende forskning utf?rt av, eller relatert til det arkitekturhistoriske fagmilj?et i Norge.
Professor of Scandinavian Literature Frode Helland will shed new light on the political aspect of Ibsen's plays.
The Departmental Seminar Series features professor Nils Bubandt, Department of Anthropology, Aarhus University.
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Note the non-standard time!
In the first part of the talk, I will give an introductory talk to o-minimality, giving the definitions and some of intuition through understanding which Lie groups are amenable to being understood in o-minimal contexts.
In the second part I will state the two theorems which have had the most important applications to algebra and give some intuition of how (at least one of them) has been used.
Dr Kevin Burke is an Associate Professor of Statistics at the University of Limerick (UL) with research interests in flexible statistical modelling, penalised regression, neural networks, random effects, survival/reliability analysis, and industrial modelling. See https://kevinburke.ie/ for more details. Previously he was Director of UL's Industrial Mathematics Unit (from 2016 - 2020), and a Science Foundation Ireland Public Service Fellow with the Food Safety Authority of Ireland (2020 - 2021). He is the Vice President of the Irish Statistical Association, and the Chair of the International Workshop on Statistical Modelling (IWSM) 2025. IWSM 2025 will be hosted in Limerick City, Ireland, from Sunday 13th July to Friday 18th July 2025; the call for papers is currently open (https://iwsm2025.ie/call-for-papers).
Professor at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona, Xavier Serra, will as a part of RITMO Largo speak at RITMO's Seminar Series
Join us for a CIMS lecture by Jonas Elbousty from Yale University.
The efficient redistribution and control of flow is essential in many biological and engineered systems, from our cardiovascular system to plants and soft robotics. Inspired by nature, microfluidic devices with passive valves have been developed to perform a variety of tasks, from cell manipulation to fluid mixing and reaction control, giving rise to the field of soft hydraulics. In this talk, we present two prototypes of passive valves: one harnessing buckling in slender beams and another leveraging snapping in spherical shells, where fluid-induced elastic instabilities are tamed to achieve function. Through a combination of precision desktop-scale experiments, numerical simulations, and theoretical analysis, we rationalize these behaviors and provide design rules based on scaling regimes of material, geometric, and fluid parameters.
Erik Asphaug, University of Arizona and PHAB, UiO.