Santa Fe Institute Collaboration Platform

COMPLEX TIME: Adaptation, Aging, & Arrow of Time

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Contact: Caitlin Lorraine McShea, Program Manager, cmcshea@santafe.edu

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  1. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases II/MyPage
  2. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases II/Session I: Immune System: Architecture and Dynamics
  3. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases II/Session II: Immune System: Aging and Heterogeneity
  4. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases II/Session IV: Short Talks for Late Arrival
  5. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases II/Session V: Aging and the Arrow of Time –Breakout Group Updates and Broader Themes of the SFI/JSMF Initiative
  6. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases II/Session VI: Breakout group presentations, discussion of themes, and next steps
  7. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases II/Summary of Day 1: Each speaker from Day 1 gives a 5 minute, two slides summary (intended to bring late arrivals up to date)
  8. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases II/Welcome
  9. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III
  10. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Breakout Group Presentations
  11. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Closing and next steps
  12. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 1 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  13. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 1 Discussion, development of themes, and structure of breakout groups for the rest of the week
  14. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 1 Lunch (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  15. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 1 PM Break
  16. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 2 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  17. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 2 Group Discussion and Working Group Planning Sessions
  18. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 2 Lunch (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  19. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 2 Working Group Breakout Sessions
  20. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 3 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  21. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 3 Lunch (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  22. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 3 PM Break
  23. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 3 Working Group Breakout Sessions I
  24. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 3 Working Group Breakout Sessions II
  25. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 3 Working Group Breakout Sessions III
  26. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 4 Continental Breakfast (outside Noyce Conference Room)
  27. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Day 4 Lunch (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  28. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Discussion: Plans for an SFI publication / Presentation from SFI Press
  29. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Group Dinner
  30. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/KatieGostic
  31. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Optional additional Working Group Sessions (for those staying that afternoon)
  32. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Re-assembling: Brief updates and plans for Day 3
  33. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Session I: Immune System: Innate/Adaptive collaboration
  34. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Session II: Diversity, adaptive immunity, and age
  35. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Session III: Disease History, Aging, and Complex Time
  36. Aging and Adaptation in Infectious Diseases III/Welcome, Introductions and Workshop Overview
  37. Aging and measures of processing speed
  38. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life
  39. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/A time to sleep and a time to die
  40. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/About time: Precision measurements and emergent simplicities in an individual bacterial cell's stochastic aging dynamics.
  41. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/All creatures fast and slow: senescence and longevity across the tree of life
  42. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/Bree Aldridge
  43. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/Day 1 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Collins Conference Room)
  44. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/Discussion
  45. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/JacopoGrilli
  46. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/LinChao
  47. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/MartinPicard
  48. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/MatteoOsella
  49. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/More questions than answers: relations between quantittative physiology and aging in E. coli
  50. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/Overview of the meeting
  51. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/Owen Jones
  52. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/SabrinaSpencer
  53. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/SrividyaIyer-Biswas
  54. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/Stochastic processes shape senescence, beyond genes, and environment
  55. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/Stochasticity, immortality, and mortality in E. coli
  56. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/Systematic Physiology and Aging Across Diverse Organisms
  57. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/The long and the short of it: mycobacterial aging, asymmetry, and stress tolerance
  58. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/Time perception and the rate of cellular aging outside the human body: an energetic perspective
  59. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/Toward a Molecular Understanding of Quiescence versus Senescence
  60. Aging in Single-celled Organisms: from Bacteria to the Whole Tree of Life/UliSteiner
  61. Aging in complex interdependency networks
  62. Altered avalanche dynamics in a developmental NMDAR hypofunction model of cognitive impairment
  63. Amplification or suppression: Social networks and the climate change-migration association in rural Mexico
  64. An Optimization-Based Approach to Understanding Sensory Systems
  65. An exploration of the temporal dynamics
  66. An opposite role for tau in circadian rhythms revealed by mathematical modeling
  67. Antidepressant suppression of non-REM sleep spindles and REM sleep impairs hippocampus-dependent learning while augmenting striatum-dependent learning
  68. Are There too Many Farms in the World? Labor-Market Transaction Costs, Machine Capacities and Optimal Farm Size
  69. Are individual differences in sleep and circadian timing amplified by use of artificial light sources?
  70. Asking the Right Questions in Alzheimer’s Research
  71. Available energy fluxes drive a transition in the diversity, stability, and functional structure of microbial communities
  72. Brain computer interface
  73. Brain disorders? Not really: Why network structures block reductionism in psychopathology research
  74. Brain state stability during working memory is explained by network control theory, modulated by dopamine D1/D2 receptor function, and diminished in schizophrenia
  75. CD4 memory T cell levels predict life span in genetically heterogeneous mice.
  76. Chesapeake requiem
  77. Cholinergic modulation of cognitive processing: Insights drawn from computational models
  78. Choosing Prediction Over Explanation in Psychology: Lessons From Machine Learning
  79. Circadian pacemaker interferes with sleep onset at specific times each day: Role in insomnia
  80. Circadian phenotype impacts the brain's resting-state functional connectivity, attentional performance, and sleepiness
  81. Circadian regulation dominates homeostatic control of sleep length and prior wake length in humans
  82. Circadian temperature and melatonin rhythms, sleep, and neurobehavioral function in humans living on a 20-h day
  83. Climate shocks and rural-urban migration in Mexico: exploring nonlinearities and thresholds
  84. Climate shocks and the timing of migration from Mexico
  85. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks
  86. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/(Optional) SFI Community Lecture at the Lensic Performing Arts Center by Melanie Mitchell: Artificial Intelligence: A Guide for Thinking Humans
  87. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/AmyPChen2
  88. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/ArtemyKolchinsky
  89. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/CaterinaGratton
  90. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Cocktail
  91. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Collective Computation and Critical Transitions
  92. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/DanielleBassett
  93. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/DavidKrakauer
  94. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Day 1 Continental Breakfast
  95. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Day 1 Lunch
  96. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Day 1 Shuttle Departing Hotel Santa Fe (at lobby) to SFI
  97. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Day 1 Shuttle Departing SFI to Hotel Santa Fe
  98. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Day 1 wiki platform work time
  99. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Day 2 Continental Breakfast
  100. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Day 2 Lunch
  101. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Day 2 Shuttle Departing SFI to Hotel Santa Fe
  102. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Day 2 wiki platform work time
  103. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/DietmarPlenz
  104. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Ehren Newman
  105. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/GaganWig
  106. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Group dinner
  107. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Introductory Remarks
  108. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/JackGallant
  109. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/JacopoGrilli
  110. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/JohnKrakauer
  111. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/MyPage
  112. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/NikolausKriegeskorte
  113. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/PaulGarcia
  114. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/RandyMcIntosh
  115. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Recap from Day 1
  116. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/RichardFrackowiak
  117. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/RobertoCabeza
  118. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Robustness of Brain Function
  119. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Round Table Discussion 1: The nature of compensation and cognitive reserves
  120. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Round Table Discussion 2: The multiple scales of damage – from cells to networks
  121. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Round Table Discussion 3: Models for transforming circuits (neural) into tasks (psychology)
  122. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/RussPoldrack
  123. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/StevenPetersen
  124. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/SusanFitzpatrick
  125. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/Task-performing neural network models enable us to test theories of brain computation with brain and behavioral data
  126. Cognitive Regime Shift II - When/why/how the Brain Breaks/ViktorJirsa
  127. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks
  128. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/"Prion dynamics and latency"
  129. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/"The use of large-scale brain correlations to study aging and some interesting issues that they raise"
  130. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/CaterinaGratton
  131. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Consciousness, Cognition, and the Prefrontal Cortex
  132. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/DavidKrakauer
  133. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Day 1 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Collins Conference Room)
  134. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Day 1 Group Dinner at La Boca
  135. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Day 1 Lunch (outside SFI Collins Conference Room)
  136. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Day 1 PM Break
  137. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Day 2 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Collins Conference Room)
  138. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Day 2 Dinner: self-organize
  139. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Day 2 Lunch (outside SFI Collins Conference Room)
  140. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Day 2 PM Break
  141. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Day 3 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Collins Conference Room)
  142. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Day 3 Lunch (outside SFI Collins Conference Room); Adjourn
  143. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/GaganWig
  144. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Gene Networks in Brain and Neurodegenerative Disorders
  145. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/GeorgeMashour
  146. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/GrahamHCreasey
  147. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/How Does Context Impact Cortical Development
  148. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/JacopoGrilli
  149. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Large-scale Brain Network Changes Across the Healthy Adult Human Lifespan: Relations to Cognition and First Steps toward Identifying Potential Risk Factors of Brain Decline
  150. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Network Breakdown Phenomena
  151. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Neuronal Avalanches
  152. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/On the Stability of Large Ecological Communities
  153. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Open discussion, synthesis, planning for Day 3, platform time
  154. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Recap from Day 1
  155. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Research Jam
  156. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/SidneyRedner
  157. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/States and Stability in Human Functional Brain Networks
  158. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/The Brain and other Networks
  159. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/WG Context under SFI Adaptation, Aging, Arrow of Time (AAA) & Wiki Collaboration Platform
  160. Cognitive Regime Shift I - When the Brain Breaks/Welcome & Introduction around the Room
  161. Cognitive neuroscience of sleep
  162. Coherence potentials: Loss-less, all-or-none network events in the cortex
  163. Communication dynamics in complex brain networks
  164. Community of the Self
  165. Comparing the Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire and Munich ChronoType Questionnaire to the dim light melatonin onset
  166. Complexity of neural computation and cognition
  167. Control of Mammalian Circadian Rhythm by CKI -Regulated Proteasome-Mediated PER2 Degradation
  168. Coordinated reset
  169. Coordinated reset vibrotactile stimulation shows prolonged improvement in Parkinson's disease
  170. Correlation between genetic regulation of immune responsiveness and host defence against infections and tumours
  171. Correlation between interaction strengths drives stability in large ecological networks
  172. Cortically coordinated NREM thalamocortical oscillations play an essential, instructive role in visual system plasticity
  173. Critical dynamics of gene networks is a mechanism behind ageing and Gompertz law
  174. Critical networks exhibit maximal information diversity in structure-dynamics relationships
  175. Critical slowing down as early warning for the onset and termination of depression
  176. Critical slowing down as early warning for the onset and termination of depression2
  177. Critical slowing down as early warning for the onset and termination of depression3
  178. Critical slowing down as early warning for the onset and termination of depression4
  179. Data analysis using regression and multilevel/hierarchical models
  180. Decline of long-range temporal correlations in the human brain during sustained wakefulness
  181. Decreased segregation of brain systems across the healthy adult lifespan
  182. Demography of dietary restriction and death in Drosophila
  183. Differential and enhanced response to climate forcing in diarrheal disease due to rotavirus across a megacity of the developing world
  184. Diversity, Stability, and Reproducibility in Stochastically Assembled Microbial Ecosystems
  185. Diversity of ageing across the tree of life
  186. Doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1810630115
  187. Domestic and International Climate Migration from Rural Mexico
  188. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging
  189. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/AlfonsHoekstra
  190. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/ChhandaDutta
  191. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Conceptual models of human aging and resilience
  192. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 1 AM Break
  193. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 1 Collaborative Platform Work Time
  194. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 1 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  195. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 1 Lunch (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  196. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 1 Open group discussion
  197. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 1 PM Break
  198. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 1 Shuttle Departing Hotel Santa Fe (at lobby) to SFI
  199. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 1 Shuttle Departing SFI to Hotel Santa Fe
  200. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 2 AM Break
  201. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 2 Collaborative Platform Work Time
  202. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 2 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  203. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 2 Lunch (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  204. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 2 Open group discussion
  205. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 2 Open group discussion II
  206. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 2 Opening Remarks
  207. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 2 PM Break
  208. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 2 Shuttle Departing Hotel Santa Fe (at lobby)
  209. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Day 2 Shuttle Departing SFI to Hotel Santa Fe
  210. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/DervisCanVural
  211. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Developing dynamical indicators of resilience based on physiologic time series in older adult
  212. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Dynamical systems approach to studying resilience in older adults
  213. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Ecology for doctors: system dynamics models as a tool to understand observed behavior
  214. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Emergence of Aging in Natural and Synthetic Multicellular Structures
  215. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Group dinner at Casa Chimayo
  216. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/HeatherWhitson
  217. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/IngridvdLeemput
  218. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/JerraldRector
  219. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/LuisAmaral
  220. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/MarcelGMOldeRikkert
  221. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Multiscale modeling to help making sense of dynamical multiscale resilience
  222. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/MyPage
  223. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/PeterMHoffmann
  224. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Physical resilience is a predictor of healthy aging in mice
  225. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/PorterSwentzell
  226. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/RaviVaradhan
  227. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/ReneMelis
  228. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Resilience and vulnerability in a stressed system: an example from the wards
  229. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Resilience in New Mexico’s Indigenous Communities
  230. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/SanneGijzel
  231. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Studies of Resiliencies to Physiologic Stressors: Need for Multilevel and Life Course Approaches
  232. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/SusanFitzpatrick
  233. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/TimBuchman
  234. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/WG Context under SFI Adaptation, Aging, Arrow of Time (AAA) Research Theme
  235. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/WarrenCLadiges
  236. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging/Welcome & introduction around the Room
  237. Dynamic Multi-System Resilience in Human Aging Shared-doc
  238. Dynamical Resilience Indicators in Time Series of Self-Rated Health Correspond to Frailty Levels in Older Adults
  239. Dynamical indicators of resilience in postural balance time series are related to successful aging in high-functioning older adults
  240. Early-warning signals for critical transitions
  241. Eco-Evolutionary Theory and Insect Outbreaks
  242. Ecosystem tipping points in an evolving world
  243. Editorial overview: Neurobiology of cognitive behavior: Complexity of neural computation and cognition
  244. Effects of Meditation Experience on Functional Connectivity of Distributed Brain Networks
  245. Effects of host heterogeneity on pathogen diversity and evolution
  246. Effects of thermoregulation on human sleep patterns a mathematical model
  247. Elevated success of multispecies bacterial invasions impacts community composition during ecological succession
  248. Emancipatory catastrophism: What does it mean to climate change and risk society?
  249. Emergence of complex dynamics in a simple model of signaling networks
  250. Emergent Functional Network Effects in Parkinson Disease
  251. Emergent simplicity in microbial community assembly
  252. Entrainment of the human circadian clock to the natural light-dark cycle
  253. Environmental Dimensions of Migration
  254. Evidence of strain structure in Plasmodium falciparum var gene repertoires in children from Gabon, West Africa
  255. Evolution and climate variability
  256. Experience-dependent phase-reversal of hippocampal neuron firing during REM sleep
  257. Exposure to room light before bedtime suppresses melatonin onset and shortens melatonin duration in humans
  258. Extended Twilight among Isogenic C. elegans Causes a Disproportionate Scaling between Lifespan and Health
  259. Fisher's geometrical model and the mutational patterns of antibiotic resistance across dose gradients
  260. Fisher's geometrical model emerges as a property of complex integrated phenotypic networks
  261. Five Years of Experimental Warming Increases the Biodiversity and Productivity of Phytoplankton
  262. Fractal dynamics in physiology: Alterations with disease and aging
  263. Frequency-dependent selection in vaccine-associated pneumococcal population dynamics
  264. Functional Brain Networks Are Dominated by Stable Group and Individual Factors, Not Cognitive or Daily Variation
  265. Genetic control of immune responsiveness, aging and tumor incidence
  266. Genetic regulation of the specific and non-specific component of immunity
  267. Genetics of the human circadian clock and sleep homeostat
  268. Hallmarks of Biological Failure
  269. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Adjourn; Shuttle Departing SFI to Hotel Santa Fe
  270. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/BarbaraNatterson-Horowitz
  271. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/BernieCrespi
  272. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Breakout Group Discussion I
  273. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Breakout Group Discussion II
  274. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Complexity, Breaking Bad Tradeoffs, and the Evolution of Biological Failure
  275. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Context Framing
  276. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/DanielPromislow
  277. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/DarioValenzano
  278. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/DavidSchneider
  279. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 1 AM Break
  280. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 1 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  281. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 1 Lunch (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  282. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 1 Open Discussion
  283. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 1 PM Break
  284. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 1 Shuttle Departing Hotel Santa Fe (at lobby) to SFI
  285. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 1 Shuttle Departing SFI to Hotel Santa Fe
  286. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 1 Wiki Platform Work Time
  287. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 2 AM Break
  288. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 2 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  289. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 2 Lunch (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  290. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 2 PM Break
  291. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 2 Shuttle Departing Hotel Santa Fe (at lobby) to SFI
  292. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 2 Shuttle Departing SFI to Hotel Santa Fe
  293. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 2 Wiki Platform Work Time
  294. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 3 AM Break
  295. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 3 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  296. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 3 Lunch (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room); Adjourn
  297. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 3 Shuttle Departing Hotel Santa Fe (at lobby) to SFI
  298. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Day 3 Wiki Platform Work Time
  299. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Dynamic Cardiovascular Systems, Evolved Adaptations and Clinical Pathology
  300. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Explain this! - Evolutionary approaches to unanswered questions in cancer biology
  301. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Group Discussion & Breakout Group Discussion
  302. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Group Presentations and Plans for Next Steps
  303. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Group dinner at Casa Chimayo
  304. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Introduction: 3-min Lightning Talks
  305. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/JamesDeGregori
  306. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/KelleyHarris
  307. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/MariaRiolo
  308. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/MartenScheffer
  309. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Measuring the resilience of hosts to infections by mapping disease space
  310. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Metabolic Integrity & Aging: Amplification of Small Perturbations
  311. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/MichaelHochberg
  312. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Models in Aging: Two Examples
  313. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/MorganLevine
  314. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/MyPage
  315. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/OphelieRonce
  316. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Quantifying Resilience of Humans and other Animals
  317. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Recap from Day 1
  318. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Recap from Day 1 & 2
  319. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Relaxed selection shapes the rate of aging across species
  320. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/RozalynAnderson
  321. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/SabrinaSpencer
  322. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/ShripadTuljapurkar
  323. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Single-cell analysis of heterogeneity in proliferation-quiescence decisions
  324. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/Systems-Level Modeling of Aging across Biological Levels of Organization
  325. Hallmarks of Biological Failure/WG Context under Adaptation, Aging, Arrow of Time project
  326. Hallmarks of Biological Failure Breakout Group Discussion
  327. Health beliefs and the politics of Cree well-being
  328. Heuristic segmentation of a nonstationary time series
  329. Hierarchy theory: the challenge of complex systems
  330. Hierarchy theory: the challenge of complex systems2
  331. High performance communication by people with paralysis using an intracortical brain-computer interface
  332. High sensitivity and interindividual variability in the response of the human circadian system to evening light
  333. Hippocampal network oscillations rescue memory consolidation deficits caused by sleep loss
  334. Homer1a drives homeostatic scaling-down of excitatory synapses during sleep
  335. How the World Survived the Population Bomb: Lessons From 50 Years of Extraordinary Demographic History
  336. Human cortical excitability increases with time awake
  337. Human information processing in complex networks
  338. In Vivo Amelioration of Age-Associated Hallmarks by Partial Reprogramming Cellular reprogramming by transient expression of Yamanaka factors ameliorates age-associated symptoms, prolongs lifespan in progeroid mice, and improves tissue homeostasis in older
  339. In defence of repugnance
  340. Increased Network Interdependency Leads to Aging
  341. Indirect genetic effects clarify how traits can evolve even when fitness does not
  342. Inferring network structure from cascades
  343. Inheritance of immune responsiveness, life span, and disease incidence in interline crosses of mice selected for high or low multispecific antibody production.
  344. Input source and strength influences overall firing phase of model hippocampal CA1 pyramidal cells during theta: Relevance to REM sleep reactivation and memory consolidation
  345. Interdependence theory of tissue failure: Bulk and boundary effects
  346. Intergenerational resource transfers with random offspring numbers
  347. International Climate Migration: Evidence for the Climate Inhibitor Mechanism and the Agricultural Pathway
  348. Intrinsic period and light intensity determine the phase relationship between melatonin and sleep in humans
  349. Irregular spiking of pyramidal neurons organizes as scale-invariant neuronal avalanches in the awake state
  350. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution
  351. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/AmyPChen
  352. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/AnnetteOstling
  353. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Are changes in species interactions and their ecosystem consequences irreversible?
  354. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Collaborative Platform Work Time: references, reference note, presentation upload, additional reflection & commenting on each other’s reflection
  355. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Cooperation and specialization in dynamic fluids
  356. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Cooperative growth and cell-cell aggregation in marine bacteria
  357. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Day 1 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  358. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Day 1 Lunch (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  359. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Day 1 PM Break
  360. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Day 2 AM Break
  361. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Day 2 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  362. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Day 2 Lunch (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  363. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Day 2 Open discussion
  364. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Day 2 PM Break
  365. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Day 2 Reflection time
  366. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Day 3 AM Break
  367. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Day 3 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  368. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Day 3 Lunch (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room); Adjourn
  369. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Day 3 Open discussion
  370. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Day 3 Reflection time
  371. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/DervisCanVural
  372. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Emergent structure and dynamics in stochastic, open, competitive communities
  373. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/FernandaValdovinos
  374. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/GregDwyer
  375. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Higher-order interactions, stability across timescales, and macroecological patterns
  376. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Irreversible processes in ecological networks
  377. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/JacopoGrilli
  378. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/MyPage
  379. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/NathanielRupprecht
  380. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Natural selection, population cycles, and climate change in forest insects
  381. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Open discussion & reflection time I
  382. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Open discussion & reflection time II
  383. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Open discussion & reflection time III
  384. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/OttoCordero
  385. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Pathogen diversity and negative frequency-dependent selection: consequences for intervention
  386. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Phenotypic evolution in the Anthropocene
  387. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Population genetics of low-probability transitions
  388. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/PriyangaAmarasekare
  389. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/RobertMarsland
  390. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/SamraatPawar
  391. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Statistical mechanics of microbiomes
  392. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/StephenProulx
  393. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/SusanFitzpatrick
  394. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/SushrutGhonge
  395. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/WG Context under Adaptation, Aging, Arrow of Time project
  396. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Welcome & introduction around the room
  397. Irreversible Processes in Ecological Evolution/Working Group Context Framing
  398. K-complex, a reactive EEG graphoelement of NREM sleep: An old chap in a new garment
  399. Life-Span, tumor incidence, and natural killer cell activity in mice selected for high or low antibody responsiveness
  400. Limits of Prediction in thermodynamic systems: a review
  401. Longevity Among Hunter- Gatherers: A Cross-Cultural Examination
  402. Loss of Consciousness Is Associated with Stabilization of Cortical Activity
  403. Loss of Consciousness Is Associated with Stabilization of Cortical Activity2
  404. Lost in translation
  405. Lotka-Volterra pairwise modeling fails to capture diverse pairwise microbial interactions
  406. Macroscopic Models for Human Circadian Rhythms
  407. Magnetoencephalography
  408. Main Page
  409. Maintenance, reserve and compensation: the cognitive neuroscience of healthy ageing
  410. Mammalian sleep dynamics: How diverse features arise from a common physiological framework
  411. Markov mortality models: Implications of quasistationarity and varying initial distributions
  412. Mathematical model of the human circadian system with two interacting oscillators.
  413. Metabolic resource allocation in individual microbes determines ecosystem interactions and spatial dynamics
  414. Metabolic traits predict the effects of warming on phytoplankton
  415. Metabolic traits predict the effects of warming on phytoplankton competition
  416. Microbial interactions lead to rapid micro-scale successions on model marine particles
  417. Modeling life expectancy and surplus production of dynamic pre-contact territories in leeward Kohala, Hawai'i
  418. Modeling the temporal architecture of rat sleep-wake behavior.
  419. Modeling transformations of neurodevelopmental sequences across mammalian species
  420. Modulations of the experience of self and time
  421. Mortality experience of Tsimane Amerindians of Bolivia: Regional variation and temporal trends
  422. Multi-day rhythms modulate seizure risk in epilepsy
  423. Multilevel Analysis
  424. Multitrait successional forest dynamics enable diverse competitive coexistence
  425. Natural speech reveals the semantic maps that tile human cerebral cortex
  426. Network measures predict neuropsychological outcome after brain injury
  427. Networks of genetic similarity reveal non-neutral processes shape strain structure in Plasmodium falciparum
  428. Neuronal avalanches and coherence potentials
  429. Neutral theory for life histories
  430. Niche partitioning due to adaptive foraging reverses effects of nestedness and connectance on pollination network stability
  431. On Nonstable and Stable Population Momentum
  432. On mixed-effect Cox models, sparse matrices, and modeling data from large pedigrees
  433. On the decline of biodiversity due to area loss
  434. On the low dimensionality of behavioral deficits and alterations of brain network connectivity after focal injury
  435. On the role of general theory in ecology
  436. Open questions in artificial life
  437. Paradoxical timing of the circadian rhythm of sleep propensity serves to consolidate sleep and wakefulness in humans
  438. Parvalbumin-expressing interneurons coordinate hippocampal network dynamics required for memory consolidation
  439. Pawar systematic variation
  440. Peak of circadian melatonin rhythm occurs later within the sleep of older subjects
  441. Physical Resilience: Not Simply the Opposite of Frailty
  442. Physical resilience in older adults: Systematic review and development of an emerging construct
  443. PhysioBank, PhysioToolkit, and PhysioNet : Components of a New Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals
  444. Population and prehistory I: Food-dependent population growth in constant environments
  445. Population and prehistory II: Space-limited human populations in constant environments.
  446. Population and prehistory III: Food-dependent demography in variable environments
  447. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics
  448. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/AishaDasgupta
  449. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/AmanBorkar
  450. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/AmyLastuka
  451. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/AmyPChen
  452. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/AndyRominger
  453. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/CarolineBledsoe
  454. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/CharlotteLee
  455. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/ChhaviTiwari
  456. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/ChrisKempes
  457. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/ChristopherCowie
  458. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Closing remarks
  459. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Co-evolution of population and environment - anthropogenic change & biodiversity
  460. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Co-evolution of population and environment - ecological & metabolic dynamics
  461. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Co-evolution of population and environment - environment, food supply & demography
  462. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Co-evolution of population and environment - perceiving climate change and its impacts on reproduction and migration
  463. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/ConstanceFrohly
  464. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Day 1 AM Break 1
  465. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Day 1 AM Break 2
  466. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Day 1 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  467. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Day 1 Lunch (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  468. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Day 1 PM Break 1
  469. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Day 1 PM Break 2
  470. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Day 2 AM Break 1
  471. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Day 2 AM Break 2
  472. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Day 2 AM Break 3
  473. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Day 2 Continental Breakfast (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  474. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Day 2 Lunch (outside SFI Noyce Conference Room)
  475. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Day 2 PM Break 1
  476. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Day 2 PM Break 2
  477. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Economic development and demographic choices
  478. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/EvaNurwita
  479. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Foundation of population ethics - population axiology & moral theory
  480. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Group photo
  481. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Household decisions and their consequences - fertility & family planning
  482. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Household decisions and their consequences - fundamentals of the demographic transition
  483. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Household decisions and their consequences - rural livelihoods, migration & climate
  484. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Introduction & foundation of population ethics
  485. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/IzaRomanowska
  486. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/JakeOrgan
  487. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/KaarelSikk
  488. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/KaileyMartinez
  489. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/KaitlynDavis
  490. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/LoriHunter
  491. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/MarcelGMOldeRikkert
  492. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/MaryShenk
  493. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Modeling complex populations - action of selection on fertility & mortality
  494. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Modeling complex populations - dynamics of age-structured populations
  495. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Modeling complex populations - statistical inference from demographic data
  496. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/MohammadAli
  497. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/MyPage
  498. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/NadiaFarooq
  499. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/PaulHooper
  500. Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/PeterRoolf

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