Tidligere arrangementer - Side 10
In this final seminar, Gro Stueland Skorpen will present the draft of her PhD thesis titled “Looking into the digital state. An ethnography of audit”.
Department seminar. Lin Tian is an Assistant Professor of Economics at INSEAD and a fellow at the CEPR International Trade and Regional Economics Program. She will be presenting the paper: "Human Capital and Labor Market Shocks in the Modern Economy” (written with Valerie Smeets and Sharon Traiberman).
Ranveig Kvinnsland og Ingerid L?yning Dale presenterer tverrfaglig arbeid med korpusbygging.
Leon Wash (Trinity College Dublin)
Mikko has been working at Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke) since 2017.
He finished his PhD on spatial point processes in 2022 (University of Jyv?skyl?).
Since then Mikko has been working on many kinds of remote sensing, forest inventory and forest planning projects.
Also, during 2015-2016 Mikko was working at the National Institute of Health and Welfare as a data manager.
This two days workshop will be concerned with improving annotation about food and drink in open domain literary texts in Portuguese, Italian and Norwegian, as a step in providing a corpus infrastructure on this subject based on the CorpusEye search system. Eckhard Bick will specifically teach how to search with and annotate for CorpusEye.
A talk by Elliott Prasse-Freeman, Assistant Professor of Anthropology at National University of Singapore.
Department seminar. Lisa Laun is an Associate Professor in Economics at the Institute for Evaluation of Labour Market and Education Policy (IFAU). She will present the paper ”Private providers in active labor market policy”.
Lorena Córdova-Hernández shares her reflections about the co-production of the Indigenous Linguistic Landscape in Southern Mexico and its incidences and contradictions in the language revitalization and commodification processes.
QOMBINE seminar talk by Anna Pachol (University of South-Eastern Norway)
Tony Mroczkowski, European Southern Observatory (ESO), Germany.
M?t den italienske forfatteren Claudia Durastanti. Hun har skrevet romanen ?La straniera? som er oversatt til norsk med tittelen ?Fremmede jeg kjenner?.
Department seminar. Lint Barrage is an Associate Professor and Chair of Energy and Climate Economics at ETH Zurich. She will be presenting the paper "Equilibrium Particulate Exposure" (written with Lorenzo Aldeco and Matthew Turner).
Artificial intelligence presents new challenges and opportunities for the humanities.
The Departmental Seminar Series features associate professor Claudio Sopranzetti, Department of Sociology and Social Anthropology, Central European University.
Following his Eilert Sundt Lecture the day before, Professor Timothy Mitchell (Columbia University) will give a workshop at TIK on 23 October.
CIMS invites you to a special Wednesday lecture by anthropologist Lila Abu-Lughod from Columbia University, NYC.
The invited speaker is Juha Kere, professor and senior physician, at the Department of Medicine at the Karolinska Institute. The title of his talk is "How the embryo gets started".
Welcome to this seminar, where PhD research fellow Khalid Dader (Tampere University) will present his research on shifting gender roles and identities in Gaza.
Department seminar. Yagan Hazard is an Assistant Professor at the Collegio Carlo Alberto and the University of Turin. He will present the paper "Improving LATE estimation in experiments with imperfect compliance" (written with Simon L?we).
Kjetil Lysne Voje is Associate Professor at the Natural History Museum, UiO.
Relating phenomena across different scales is a general challenge in science. Biology is no exception, and connecting generational processes (microevolution) to the larger-scale patterns of phenotypic diversification (macroevolution) is one example. The fossil record provides a unique opportunity to study how species change in their phenotypes across different time intervals, from a few thousand to millions of years. I summarize some of the work my collaborators and I have done over the last few years to better understand the nature of within-lineage phenotypic change on short and longer timescales, and to what extent our findings have increased or reduced the gap between how we understand phenotypic evolution across the timescale continuum.
Food will be served from 12:00, the presentation starts 12:15
Archaeological Friday Seminar with Dr. Andrew Lamb
By Arne Jacobs, School of Biodiversity, One Health, and Veterinary Medicine, University of Glasgow
Swimming microorganisms and artificial microswimmers use environmental cues to influence their dynamics, helping them to improve transport, reach specific flow regions, or avoid harmful conditions. Although plankton navigate turbulent flows in nature, it is poorly understood how they do so efficiently. By combining Reinforcement Learning with analytical perturbation theory, we investigate how microswimmers can sense environmental signals and adjust a few control parameters to navigate turbulent flows. This approach helps identify effective navigation strategies for various tasks. We illustrate this with two key tasks: avoiding high-strain regions and navigating against gravity, both essential for plankton in the ocean.
It is time for our monthly "mingle" meeting. Students and employees at the institute will meet up in the lobby.