- 5th APWQIS Conference
The Institute of Advanced Studies at the Nanyang Technological University, Singapore is pleased to announce the 5th Asia-Pacific Workshop on Quantum Information Science in conjunction with the Festschrift in honour of Vladimir Korepin The first Asia-Pacific Workshop on Quantum Information … Continue reading →
- CQIQC IV Conference
Aephraim Steinberg sends a note about CQIQC Dear Friends of CQIQC: I apologize if this announcement is reaching you multiple times, and also that it reaches you somewhat late. We hope that some of you remember the first three Conferences … Continue reading →
Theory of Computation as a Lens on the Sciences
University of California, Berkeley, May 7-8, 2011
Registration for this conference will begin on Thursday, March 31 at
http://www.eecs.berkeley.edu/IPRO/lensconference2011 . There is no charge for registration. We hope you will be able to attend.
The conference will explore the theme that many processes in the physical, biological, engineering, and social sciences involve information processing at a fundamental level and can be studied through computational models. A conference held in Berkeley in May, 2002 helped crystallize this theme as a promising direction of research, and this second conference will highlight the impact of the computational lens on areas such as quantum information science, statistical physics, social networks, economics and game theory, genetics, molecular biology, evolutionary biology, cognitive science, mathematics, statistics and machine learning.
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Featured Speakers:
Professor Leslie Valiant, Harvard University
Evolution as a Form of Learning
Professor Ehud Kalai, Northwestern University
Robustness and Complexity in Games
Professor Christos Papadimitriou, UC Berkeley
Algorithms, Games, and the Internet
Professor Michael Kearns, University of Pennsylvania
Professor Mark Newman, University of Michigan
Structure and Dynamics of Networks in the Real World
Professor Michael Jordan, UC Berkeley
On Joint Inference of Phylogeny and Alignment
Professor David Haussler, UC Santa Cruz
Cancer Genomics
Professor Andrea Montanari, Stanford
Professor Daniel Fisher, Stanford
Dr. Jonathan Oppenheim, University of Cambridge
Computer Science as a Lens on Quantum Theory
Professor Umesh Vazirani, UC Berkeley
How Does Quantum Mechanics Scale?
Professor Lior Pachter, UC Berkeley
A Computational Approach to Discovery in Biology
Professor Tandy Warnow, UT, Austin
Ultra-Large Phylogenetic Estimation
Professor Sebastien Roch, UCLA
Large Phylogenies from Short Sequences: Recent Theoretical Insights
If you have questions, please contact Heather Levien, assistant to Professor Richard Karp, , (510) 642-3497.