Previous events - Page 207
Velkommen til filmvisning av Contact (1997) med Jodie Foster i hovedrollen. Signe Riemer-Sørensen, astrofysiker fra ITA, holder foredrag om filmens faglige relevans.
Andrey Pilipenko (Institute of Mathematics of Ukrainian National Academy of Sciences) gives a minicourse with the title: Reflected Stochastic Differential Equations.
Phenotypic changes following upregulation of miR-105-5p, miR-767-5p and miR-6499-5p in SW756 cervical cancer cells
Andrey Pilipenko (Institute of Mathematics of Ukrainian National Academy of Sciences) gives a minicourse with the title: Reflected Stochastic Differential Equations.
Yaozhong Hu (University of Kansas) gives a lecture with the title: Feynman-Kac formula for the stochastic heat equation driven by fractional noise in time with $H\in (0,1/2)$.
Solveig Havstad Winsvold at the Department of Geosciences will be defending her dissertation: Mapping glaciers using time-series of remote sensing data
Pat Scott, Imperial College London
I will give an introduction to GAMBIT, the Global and Modular Beyond-the-Standard Inference Tool, focussing on the Beyond-the-Standard-Model science programme currently being pursued with it. This includes indirect searches for dark matter with gamma-rays and neutrinos, direct searches with a range of underground experiments, cosmological constraints, associated searches for new particles at the LHC and in flavour experiments, and precision tests of the Standard Model. I will present the latest combined constraints on singlet Higgs-portal dark matter, and on GUT-scale and weak-scale parameterisations of supersymmetry. I will also briefly discuss GAMBIT extensions on the near horizon.
(The slides will be available here)
Doctoral candidate Solveig Winsvold at the Department of Geosciences will give a trial lecture on the given topic: Cloud masking of satellite data to support research of the Cryosphere
FORM - From Orogens to Rifted Margins and Back: The formation and deformation of continental margins through Wilson Cycles. A tribute to Prof. Torgeir B. Andersen
Late Lunch Talk by Helle Tessand Baalsrud, CEES
”Back to the future?
Lakes revisited; Ecological and water chemical impacts of reductions in long-range transported pollutants”
Hakon Dahle, Researcher, ITA
Experts have repeatedly predicted that human life expectancy soon will reach a ceiling, but they have been proven wrong every time. Annual increase in life expectancy has not slowed down, and it continues to increase by 3 months every year.
Cand. ed. Marianne Løken at the Department of Physics will be defending the thesis "Skriv ditt valg! Nyskriving av historier om @typiske utdanningsvalg" for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor.
Cand.ed. Marianne Løken at the Department of Physics will give a trial lecture on the given topic: "Inkludering i et interseksjonelt perspektiv: Hva sier den internasjonale forskningen om inkludering i STEM-fagene?"
Yaozhong Hu (University of Kansas) gives a minicourse with the title: Some aspects of stochastic heat equations.
Nicolao Fornengo, University of Torino
Anisotropies in the extragalactic electromagnetic emission originated from dark matter represent an emerging tool in the quest for a particle dark matter signal. These anisotropies are due to the cumulative emission from unresolved dark matter structures, which are present at any scale: galaxy clusters, individual galaxies, subhalos inside galaxies. The same structures can be probed by gravitational tracers of the dark matter distribution in the Universe: this is obtained by large-scale-structure surveys, but in the future a good wealth of additional and complementary information will be available from weak lensing surveys. The study of gamma-rays anisotropies and the cross-correlation between the dark matter signal and gravitational tracers offer a novel and powerful opportunity to probe the particle physics nature of dark matter. The talk will introduce details and features of gamma-rays anisotropies and give perspectives of the cross-correlation approach.
(The slides will be available here)
Purpose of the workshop: To bring together the community to learn about examples of reuse of healthcare data and methods for working with large and varied datasets.
Late Lunch Talk by Jacqueline Sztepanacz, Florida State University
A double seminar will be held in the lunch area, 8th floor Niels Henrik Abels hus at 14:15. We will have talks by Ruth Keogh (Department of Medical Statistics, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine) and Maximilian Coblenz (Institute of Operations Research, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology).
This week we will discuss a paper by Dunn et al. regarding comparing functional genomic data across species.
Yaozhong Hu (University of Kansas) gives a minicourse with the title: Some aspects of stochastic heat equations.
Professor Emmanuel Jean Candès from Stanford University holds his Lecture.
Professor Ingrid Daubechies from Duke University has her lecture.