Share Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Threads Copy url Search results Search 24434 results Filters Content type Content type (-) Lessons (24434) News (1652) People (1344) Chair (359) Editions (351) Page (230) Research (27) Library (14) Annual Chair (12) Award (6) Active filters Lessons Event Samantha Besson Theories of international liability law Symposium New York, the United Nations building under construction. Conference organized by Samantha Besson, International Law of Institutions Chair, with financial support from the Fondation du Collège de France and the Fondation Hugot du Collège de France. … 25 Jun 2021 09:00 - 18:00 Event Roger Levy Grammatical Generalization and Language Processing in Humans and Machines Symposium 24 Jun 2021 17:20 - 18:00 Event Charles Yang Why Children and Machines Learn Differently Symposium 24 Jun 2021 16:40 - 17:20 Event Tomas Mikolov Neural Language Models: The Successes, and the Challenges Symposium 24 Jun 2021 15:40 - 16:20 Event Kyunghyun Cho Few-Shot Learning Is Still Difficult With Large-Scale Language Models Symposium 24 Jun 2021 15:00 - 15:40 Event Naama Friedmann Developmental Syntactic Disorders and What They Say about the Critical Period Symposium 24 Jun 2021 12:20 - 13:00 Event Anne Christophe Bootstrapping the Syntactic Bootstrapper Symposium 24 Jun 2021 11:40 - 12:20 Event Emmanuel Chemla A Linguistic Learning Bias Found in Humans, Animals, and Artificial Learners Symposium 24 Jun 2021 10:40 - 11:20 Event Philippe Schlenker Grammatical Inferences without Words Symposium 24 Jun 2021 10:00 - 10:40 Series A genetic history : our diversity, our evolution, our adaptation Lluis Quintana-Murci, chair Human Genomics and Evolution Opening lecture 06 Feb 2020 Event Claudine Tiercelin The notion of degree in epistemology Symposium Groupe de Recherche en Épistémologie workshop Epistemology Research Group Scientific Director: Claudine Tiercelin Organizers: Jacques-Henri Vollet and Jean-Marie Chevalier Most epistemologists agree that some fundamental notions in epistemology are … 24 Jun 2021 09:00 - 17:00 Series Forgotten masters Carlo Ossola, chair Modern literature of Neolatin Europe Seminar 06 Feb 2020 → 20 Feb 2020 Series Building and deconstructing the library William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Seminar William Marx presents his lecture of the year in the series les courTs du Collège de France The history of literature can hardly be separated from that of the libraries in which literary works are read or which have handed them down to us. The singular, … 05 Feb 2020 → 11 Mar 2020 Series The library of new stars William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Lecture William Marx presents his lecture of the year in the series les courTs du Collège de France The history of literature can hardly be separated from that of the libraries in which literary works are read or which have handed them down to us. The singular, … 05 Feb 2020 → 19 May 2020 Series The calamus and the cross : the Christianization of writing and the fate of classical culture in Late Antiquity (2). Libraries (1) Jean-Luc Fournet, chair Written Culture in Late Antiquity and Byzantine Papyrology Lecture After last year's attempt, based on the thousands of papyri that have come down to us, to make a statistical study of the reception of both Christian and classical literature (i.e. produced by pre-Christian authors) during Late Antiquity, this year we'll … 05 Feb 2020 → 11 Mar 2020 Event Wilhelm Zwerger Superfluidity in Gases and Liquids Guest lecturer The first lecture deals with Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) and Superfluidity in gases and liquids. It starts with the direct observation of long-range phase coherence in a trapped gas and discusses why the ground state of any fluid phase of Bosons … 6 Oct 2021 17:00 - 18:00 Event François-Xavier Fauvelle The plague as Deus ex machina in African history Symposium Abstract What if Africa, like the rest of the Old World, had experienced the plague? The suggestion seems pertinent; the arguments, at first glance, convincing: an increasing number of publications cite the Justinian plague to explain the end of Aksum and … 22 Jun 2021 15:00 - 15:30 Event Frédéric Obringer Pestilential epidemics and the fall of the Chinese dynasties from the 13th to the 17th centuries Symposium Abstract From the epidemic that struck Kaifeng, then capital of the Great Jin State, in 1232, killing 900,000 people according to dynastic history, to the terrible epidemic episodes of the last years of the Ming dynasty (1639 to 1644), I will review the … 22 Jun 2021 15:30 - 16:00 Event Nükhet Varlik Rethinking the Black Death: Can the Ottoman Plague Experience Offer Us Novel Insights? Symposium Abstract The Black Death pandemic of the mid-fourteenth century swept across a substantial portion of Afro-Eurasia, stretching from Central Asia to the Middle East, Europe, and North Africa. Producing an estimated mortality of up to fifty percent, the … 22 Jun 2021 14:30 - 15:00 Event Giulia Puma 1951-2021. Millard Meiss and painting after the plague, 70 years later Symposium Abstract In 1951, the American Millard Meiss (1904-75) published Painting in Florence and Siena after the Black Death , in which he proposed a "courageous" overall interpretation of painting, primarily religious, in Tuscan society throughout the second … 22 Jun 2021 11:30 - 12:00 Event Marilyn Nicoud Doctors and public authorities faced with the plague Symposium Abstract After more than a year of epidemic crisis, the current health situation has been one of successive experiences: first, stupefaction, faced with the arrival of a new disease which, like the previous ones that occurred at the beginning of the 21st … 22 Jun 2021 11:00 - 11:30 Event Solal Abélès Between evidence and indifference : traces of the plague in Florentine archives from the mid-14th century Symposium Abstract In the aftermath of the plague, between 1349 and 1353, the city of Florence succeeded in extending its authority beyond the contado by subjugating several neighboring and previously autonomous communes. At first glance, the chronological … 22 Jun 2021 10:15 - 10:45 Event Étienne Anheim General introduction Symposium 22 Jun 2021 09:30 - 10:15 Event Patrick Boucheron Welcome address Symposium 22 Jun 2021 09:15 - 09:30 Pagination First page « First Previous page ‹‹ … Page 288 Page 289 Page 290 Page 291 Page 292 Page 293 Page 294 Page 295 Page 296 … Next page ›› Last page Last »
Event Samantha Besson Theories of international liability law Symposium New York, the United Nations building under construction. Conference organized by Samantha Besson, International Law of Institutions Chair, with financial support from the Fondation du Collège de France and the Fondation Hugot du Collège de France. … 25 Jun 2021 09:00 - 18:00
Event Roger Levy Grammatical Generalization and Language Processing in Humans and Machines Symposium 24 Jun 2021 17:20 - 18:00
Event Tomas Mikolov Neural Language Models: The Successes, and the Challenges Symposium 24 Jun 2021 15:40 - 16:20
Event Kyunghyun Cho Few-Shot Learning Is Still Difficult With Large-Scale Language Models Symposium 24 Jun 2021 15:00 - 15:40
Event Naama Friedmann Developmental Syntactic Disorders and What They Say about the Critical Period Symposium 24 Jun 2021 12:20 - 13:00
Event Emmanuel Chemla A Linguistic Learning Bias Found in Humans, Animals, and Artificial Learners Symposium 24 Jun 2021 10:40 - 11:20
Series A genetic history : our diversity, our evolution, our adaptation Lluis Quintana-Murci, chair Human Genomics and Evolution Opening lecture 06 Feb 2020
Event Claudine Tiercelin The notion of degree in epistemology Symposium Groupe de Recherche en Épistémologie workshop Epistemology Research Group Scientific Director: Claudine Tiercelin Organizers: Jacques-Henri Vollet and Jean-Marie Chevalier Most epistemologists agree that some fundamental notions in epistemology are … 24 Jun 2021 09:00 - 17:00
Series Forgotten masters Carlo Ossola, chair Modern literature of Neolatin Europe Seminar 06 Feb 2020 → 20 Feb 2020
Series Building and deconstructing the library William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Seminar William Marx presents his lecture of the year in the series les courTs du Collège de France The history of literature can hardly be separated from that of the libraries in which literary works are read or which have handed them down to us. The singular, … 05 Feb 2020 → 11 Mar 2020
Series The library of new stars William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Lecture William Marx presents his lecture of the year in the series les courTs du Collège de France The history of literature can hardly be separated from that of the libraries in which literary works are read or which have handed them down to us. The singular, … 05 Feb 2020 → 19 May 2020
Series The calamus and the cross : the Christianization of writing and the fate of classical culture in Late Antiquity (2). Libraries (1) Jean-Luc Fournet, chair Written Culture in Late Antiquity and Byzantine Papyrology Lecture After last year's attempt, based on the thousands of papyri that have come down to us, to make a statistical study of the reception of both Christian and classical literature (i.e. produced by pre-Christian authors) during Late Antiquity, this year we'll … 05 Feb 2020 → 11 Mar 2020
Event Wilhelm Zwerger Superfluidity in Gases and Liquids Guest lecturer The first lecture deals with Bose-Einstein Condensation (BEC) and Superfluidity in gases and liquids. It starts with the direct observation of long-range phase coherence in a trapped gas and discusses why the ground state of any fluid phase of Bosons … 6 Oct 2021 17:00 - 18:00
Event François-Xavier Fauvelle The plague as Deus ex machina in African history Symposium Abstract What if Africa, like the rest of the Old World, had experienced the plague? The suggestion seems pertinent; the arguments, at first glance, convincing: an increasing number of publications cite the Justinian plague to explain the end of Aksum and … 22 Jun 2021 15:00 - 15:30
Event Frédéric Obringer Pestilential epidemics and the fall of the Chinese dynasties from the 13th to the 17th centuries Symposium Abstract From the epidemic that struck Kaifeng, then capital of the Great Jin State, in 1232, killing 900,000 people according to dynastic history, to the terrible epidemic episodes of the last years of the Ming dynasty (1639 to 1644), I will review the … 22 Jun 2021 15:30 - 16:00
Event Nükhet Varlik Rethinking the Black Death: Can the Ottoman Plague Experience Offer Us Novel Insights? Symposium Abstract The Black Death pandemic of the mid-fourteenth century swept across a substantial portion of Afro-Eurasia, stretching from Central Asia to the Middle East, Europe, and North Africa. Producing an estimated mortality of up to fifty percent, the … 22 Jun 2021 14:30 - 15:00
Event Giulia Puma 1951-2021. Millard Meiss and painting after the plague, 70 years later Symposium Abstract In 1951, the American Millard Meiss (1904-75) published Painting in Florence and Siena after the Black Death , in which he proposed a "courageous" overall interpretation of painting, primarily religious, in Tuscan society throughout the second … 22 Jun 2021 11:30 - 12:00
Event Marilyn Nicoud Doctors and public authorities faced with the plague Symposium Abstract After more than a year of epidemic crisis, the current health situation has been one of successive experiences: first, stupefaction, faced with the arrival of a new disease which, like the previous ones that occurred at the beginning of the 21st … 22 Jun 2021 11:00 - 11:30
Event Solal Abélès Between evidence and indifference : traces of the plague in Florentine archives from the mid-14th century Symposium Abstract In the aftermath of the plague, between 1349 and 1353, the city of Florence succeeded in extending its authority beyond the contado by subjugating several neighboring and previously autonomous communes. At first glance, the chronological … 22 Jun 2021 10:15 - 10:45