CSCS

UM-SFI Workshop, Fall 2003

SFI
UMSFI03

Emergence and Engineering in Complex Systems
Wed-Fri, 12-14 November 2003
9:00am - 12:00; 2:00pm-5.00pm


Location: General Motors Conference Room, Lurie Engineering Bld., North Campus

Visitor Information

Each fall term The University of Michigan Center for the Study of Complex Systems (CSCS) hosts the "UM-SFI Workshop" to gather together a relatively small group of researchers for a few days of talks and discussion of some Complex Adaptive Systems topics.

This year's speakers will be addressing this theme in a variety of settings, with "systems" understood as broad category including software systems, cognitive systems, hardware (robotic) systems or physical structures (e.g., architectural designs). One common thread uniting these diverse systems is the real challenge of creating these kinds of complex systems with particular structural or dynamic properties, e.g., to create:

Part of the challenge in creating complex systems like those listed is that while some properties can be more-or-less directly designed into a system, other properties emerge from the interaction of the system's parts. In addition, there is a growing interest in approaches to design that don't just take the emergent properties as complexities to be kept under control, but instead try to harness those emergent properties to achieve design goals.


Workshop Schedule

Note: This is a tentative schedule, which may change if some speakers have constraints on when they can talk.

Wednesday 12 November

8:30am Coffee & Continental Breakfast
Introductions: Carl Simon, Director CSCS
Opening Remarks: James Bean, Assoc. Dean for Academic Affairs, School of Engineering, University of Michigan
9:00 Trading Agents Competing - Abstract
Michael Wellman, Director, Artificial Intelligence Lab
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of Michigan
<http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/wellman/>
10:30 Break
11:00 Engineering for Emergence: Robots and Creative Surfaces - Abstract
Una-May O'Reilly, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab, MIT
<unamay@ai.mit.edu>
<http://www.ai.mit.edu/people/unamay/>
12:30pm Break for Lunch
2:00 Coevolutionary Learning - Abstract
Melanie Mitchell, Computer Science & Engineering, Oregon Graduate Institute
External Faculty, Santa Fe Institute
<mm@cse.ogi.edu>
<http://www.cse.ogi.edu/~mm/>
3:30 Use of heuristics methods for system-wide coordination in noisy environments
Luis Amaral, Chemical Engineering, Northwestern University
<amaral@northwestern.edu>
<http://www.chem-eng.northwestern.edu/Faculty/amaral.html>

Thursday 13 November

8:30am Coffee & Continental Breakfast
Opening Remarks
9:00 Self-organization in phase transitions and geometric graphs - Abstract
Raissa D'Souza, Microsoft
<raissa@microsoft.com>
<http://research.microsoft.com/users/raissa/>
10:30 Break
11:00 Emergence of Creativity - Abstract
John Koza, Consulting Professor, Medical Informatics, Electrical Engineering, Stanford University
<koza@cs.stanford.edu>
<http://www.genetic-programming.com/johnkoza.html>
12:30pm Break for Lunch
2:00 Toward a Synthesis of Form and Function: Notes from the Pre-Genomic Era of Robotics - Abstract
Daniel Koditschek, Electrical Engineering & Computer Science
Artificial Intelligence Lab, University of Michigan
<kod@umich.edu>
<http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/kod/>
3:30 Move to 1504 GG Brown Building (Iacocca Room) for
Open seminar sponsored by STIET and CSCS
4:00 Finding Needles in a 30TB Haystack, 200 Million Times a Day
Peter Norvig, Director of Search Quality, Google
<peter@norvig.com>
<http://www.norvig.com/>

Friday 14 November

8:30am Coffee & Continental Breakfast
Opening Remarks
9:00 Building Complex Human-level Synthetic Characters - Abstract
John Laird, Assoc. Chair, Computer Science & Engineering
Artificial Intelligence, University of Michigan
<laird@umich.edu>
<http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/laird/>
10:30 Break
11:00 Adaptive Defense of Computing Infastructures
Stephanie Forrest, Computer Science, University of New Mexico
External Faculty, Santa Fe Institute
<forrest@cs.unm.edu>
<http://www.cs.unm.edu/~forrest/>
12:30pm Break for Lunch
2:00 Predictive Models for Reinforcement Learning - Abstract
Satinder Singh, Computer Science & Engineering, University of Michigan
<baveja@umich.edu>
<http://www.eecs.umich.edu/~baveja/>
3:30 Strategies for Discovering Coordination Needs
Ed Durfee, Electrical Engineering & Computer Science
School of Information, University of Michigan
<durfee@umich.edu>
<http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/durfee/durfee.html>