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Complex Systems - Quant. Bio Seminar | Stochastic Turing patterns in oceans, brains and biofilms

Nigel Goldenfeld, Department of Physics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Monday, October 21, 2019
12:00-1:00 PM
335 West Hall Map
A special seminar co-hosted by Quantitative Bio. Seminars & CSCS. The first of two talks Professor Goldenfeld will be giving in two days at the University of Michigan

ABSTRACT
Why are the patterns of plankton in the ocean so patchy? Why do frequently described geometrical hallucinations tend to fall into one of four different classes of pattern? Why don't we see hallucinations all the time? And why do populations in ecosystems tend to have noisy cycles in abundance? This talk explains how these phenomena all arise from the discreteness of the underlying entities, be they the on-off states of neurons or the numbers of bacteria in a fluid volume of ocean, or the number of signaling molecules in a biofilm. I explain how tools from statistical mechanics can yield insights into these phenomena, and report on a range of studies that include the operation of the primate visual cortex, the behavior of signalling molecules in a forward-engineered synthetic biofilm, and the fluctuating patterns and populations of marine organisms.
Building: West Hall
Website:
Event Type: Workshop / Seminar
Tags: Biology, biophysics, Biosciences, Complex Systems, Ecology And Evolutionary Biology, Interdisciplinary, Natural Sciences, Research
Source: Happening @ Michigan from The Center for the Study of Complex Systems, The College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, Department of Physics, Quantitative Biology Seminars