Share Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Threads Copy url Search results Search 23103 results Filters Content type Content type (-) Lessons (23103) News (1603) People (1328) Chair (352) Editions (343) Page (230) Research (27) Library (14) Annual Chair (12) Award (6) Active filters Lessons Series Extreme climates and present-day analogues : the Holocene and Tardiglacial periods Edouard Bard, chair Climate and Ocean Evolution Lecture Greenland © Edouard Bard. … 25 Feb 2022 → 01 Apr 2022 Event Jean-Luc Fournet Introduction : School is everywhere... you just have to find it ! (1) Lecture Abstract The centrality of schools The centrality of the school explains why the State and the Church were particularly interested in it during the period we're looking at. The former paid increasing attention to teaching, and for this reason was the … 15 Feb 2023 11:00 - 12:00 Event Bruno Loureiro Statistical physics and neural networks Seminar Abstract Despite the rapid evolution in the development and deployment of machine learning methods in almost all areas of society, our theoretical understanding of the mechanisms behind this success remains rather limited. As discussed several times in … 15 Feb 2023 11:15 - 12:30 Event Stéphane Mallat Ergodicity and Markov chains Lecture Abstract The Shannon-MacMillan-Breiman theorem proves the asymptotic equipartition property in typical sets, as soon as the process is ergodic. The notion of ergodicity and Birkhoff's theorem are introduced, but not proved. The main argument of the proof … 15 Feb 2023 09:30 - 11:00 Event Nikita Kavokine Quantum plumbing: where fluid dynamics meet condensed matter physics Seminar Abstract Liquids are usually described within classical physics, whereas solids require the tools of quantum mechanics. I will show how in nanoscale systems this distinction no longer holds. At these scales, liquid flows may in fact exhibit quantum … 15 Feb 2023 15:30 - 17:00 Event Lydéric Bocquet Flow, from hydrodynamic slip to quantum friction Lecture At nanometric scales, surface effects obviously become predominant. Wall friction effects play a key role, impacting all transport processes - fluid, ionic, etc. They originate in molecular friction at the interface between the fluid, e.g. water, and the … 15 Feb 2023 14:00 - 15:30 Series Translation of texts from the story of Jacob Thomas Römer, chair The Hebrew Bible and its Contexts Seminar Knowledge of Biblical Hebrew essential. … 24 Feb 2022 → 07 Apr 2022 Series The Bible's oldest epic : The Story of Jacob Thomas Römer, chair The Hebrew Bible and its Contexts Lecture Alexandre-Louis Leloir, Jacob's struggle with the angel (1865), Clermont-Ferrand, Musée d'art Roger-Quillot … 24 Feb 2022 → 14 Apr 2022 Series International law and the public/private distinction Samantha Besson, chair International Law of Institutions Lecture Is it legal, or even legitimate, for the WHO's budget to be mostly covered by private donations? Can the International Organization for Migration and the European Union legally and legitimately privatize the control of their member states ' maritime … 24 Feb 2022 → 07 Apr 2022 Event Laurence Plazenet Handwriting pathologies in the classical age Seminar Abstract Seventeenth-century authors say almost nothing about their own writing practice or their conception of their work, even though it was during this period that the advent of the author took place. This is because writing is linked to the … 14 Feb 2023 18:00 - 19:00 Series From Development to Neurodegeneration: Roles of Microglia and Other Immune Brain Cells Sonia Garel, chair Neurobiology and the Immune System Symposium Interaction between microglia and neurons … 12 May 2022 → 13 May 2022 Event William Marx " What will become of Europe's intellectual capital ? " Lecture Abstract Valéry's schema of the two mountains presupposes a hierarchy between works, according to the degree of exigency they carry. From this stems an essential problem : how do we know what type of aesthetic requirement is carried by a work ? What … 14 Feb 2023 17:00 - 18:00 Series What is life? Edith Heard, chair Epigenetics and Cellular Memory Guest lecturer Paul Nurse is a guest professor at the Collège de France, at the suggestion of Prof. Edith Heard, Chair of Epigenetics and Cellular Memory . Paul Nurse Four lectures in English will be given, the first two aimed at the general public and the other two at … 25 Feb 2022 → 20 May 2022 Event Vincent Maisonneuve Fluorinated materials as positive electrodes for Li- and Na-Ion Seminar 13 Feb 2023 17:00 - 18:00 Event Jean-Marie Tarascon AMXO4 polyanionic insertion materials with the emergence of LiFePO4 and its LiFe1-xMnxPO4 derivatives Lecture 13 Feb 2023 16:00 - 17:00 Event Antoine Lilti Discovering Europe Lecture 13 Feb 2023 14:30 - 15:30 Event Dominique Charpin Families and gods Lecture Religion is most often studied through the lens of official worship. We'll be looking at the intimacy of families, observing domestic spaces reserved for worship (" chapels ") and family devotions through the legends of cylinder … 13 Feb 2023 11:00 - 12:00 Event Guy Bunin Many-Species Dynamics in Ecosystems Seminar Interactions between species in nature can lead to fluctuations in population sizes, as for example in a two-species predator-prey system. What dynamical behavior should we expect when many species are involved, as is often the case in nature? I will … 13 Feb 2023 11:15 - 12:15 Series Biodiversity dynamics and evolution Tatiana Giraud, chair Biodiversity and ecosystems Seminar 21 Feb 2022 → 11 Apr 2022 Event Bernard Derrida Asymmetric neural networks and random automata Lecture 13 Feb 2023 09:30 - 11:00 Series Biodiversity dynamics and evolution Tatiana Giraud, chair Biodiversity and ecosystems Lecture The current threats to biodiversity are manifold. To conserve biodiversity and the countless services it provides, we need to understand how biodiversity was formed and what factors influence its dynamics. Evolutionary theory offers an extremely powerful … 21 Feb 2022 → 11 Apr 2022 Event Sylvain Charlat The emergence of Darwinian individuality : towards a meta-evolutionary perspective Seminar Abstract From intragenomic conflicts to mutualistic symbioses, biological interactions invite us to question the foundations of a rarely-explained concept that is nonetheless essential to Darwinian reasoning : the individual. The individual as " level of … 13 Feb 2023 11:00 - 12:00 Event Virginie Courtier-Orgogozo The living world is embedded in a historical process Lecture The machine metaphor does not apply well to living elements. Every cell derives from a cell. Every living thing derives from another living thing. The future dynamics of an ecosystem can only be understood in the light of its past history. Synthetic … 13 Feb 2023 10:00 - 11:00 Event Pedro Arrojo-Agudo Water commoditization and the human right to drinking water and sanitation Seminar Abstract Although water is essential to life, it is often regarded as an economic good that must be managed according to the logic of the market. This commodification of water carries risks and impacts on respect for human rights to drinking water and … 10 Feb 2023 11:00 - 12:00 Pagination First page Previous page … Page 152 Page 153 Page 154 Page 155 Current page 156 Page 157 Page 158 Page 159 Page 160 … Next page Last page
Series Extreme climates and present-day analogues : the Holocene and Tardiglacial periods Edouard Bard, chair Climate and Ocean Evolution Lecture Greenland © Edouard Bard. … 25 Feb 2022 → 01 Apr 2022
Event Jean-Luc Fournet Introduction : School is everywhere... you just have to find it ! (1) Lecture Abstract The centrality of schools The centrality of the school explains why the State and the Church were particularly interested in it during the period we're looking at. The former paid increasing attention to teaching, and for this reason was the … 15 Feb 2023 11:00 - 12:00
Event Bruno Loureiro Statistical physics and neural networks Seminar Abstract Despite the rapid evolution in the development and deployment of machine learning methods in almost all areas of society, our theoretical understanding of the mechanisms behind this success remains rather limited. As discussed several times in … 15 Feb 2023 11:15 - 12:30
Event Stéphane Mallat Ergodicity and Markov chains Lecture Abstract The Shannon-MacMillan-Breiman theorem proves the asymptotic equipartition property in typical sets, as soon as the process is ergodic. The notion of ergodicity and Birkhoff's theorem are introduced, but not proved. The main argument of the proof … 15 Feb 2023 09:30 - 11:00
Event Nikita Kavokine Quantum plumbing: where fluid dynamics meet condensed matter physics Seminar Abstract Liquids are usually described within classical physics, whereas solids require the tools of quantum mechanics. I will show how in nanoscale systems this distinction no longer holds. At these scales, liquid flows may in fact exhibit quantum … 15 Feb 2023 15:30 - 17:00
Event Lydéric Bocquet Flow, from hydrodynamic slip to quantum friction Lecture At nanometric scales, surface effects obviously become predominant. Wall friction effects play a key role, impacting all transport processes - fluid, ionic, etc. They originate in molecular friction at the interface between the fluid, e.g. water, and the … 15 Feb 2023 14:00 - 15:30
Series Translation of texts from the story of Jacob Thomas Römer, chair The Hebrew Bible and its Contexts Seminar Knowledge of Biblical Hebrew essential. … 24 Feb 2022 → 07 Apr 2022
Series The Bible's oldest epic : The Story of Jacob Thomas Römer, chair The Hebrew Bible and its Contexts Lecture Alexandre-Louis Leloir, Jacob's struggle with the angel (1865), Clermont-Ferrand, Musée d'art Roger-Quillot … 24 Feb 2022 → 14 Apr 2022
Series International law and the public/private distinction Samantha Besson, chair International Law of Institutions Lecture Is it legal, or even legitimate, for the WHO's budget to be mostly covered by private donations? Can the International Organization for Migration and the European Union legally and legitimately privatize the control of their member states ' maritime … 24 Feb 2022 → 07 Apr 2022
Event Laurence Plazenet Handwriting pathologies in the classical age Seminar Abstract Seventeenth-century authors say almost nothing about their own writing practice or their conception of their work, even though it was during this period that the advent of the author took place. This is because writing is linked to the … 14 Feb 2023 18:00 - 19:00
Series From Development to Neurodegeneration: Roles of Microglia and Other Immune Brain Cells Sonia Garel, chair Neurobiology and the Immune System Symposium Interaction between microglia and neurons … 12 May 2022 → 13 May 2022
Event William Marx " What will become of Europe's intellectual capital ? " Lecture Abstract Valéry's schema of the two mountains presupposes a hierarchy between works, according to the degree of exigency they carry. From this stems an essential problem : how do we know what type of aesthetic requirement is carried by a work ? What … 14 Feb 2023 17:00 - 18:00
Series What is life? Edith Heard, chair Epigenetics and Cellular Memory Guest lecturer Paul Nurse is a guest professor at the Collège de France, at the suggestion of Prof. Edith Heard, Chair of Epigenetics and Cellular Memory . Paul Nurse Four lectures in English will be given, the first two aimed at the general public and the other two at … 25 Feb 2022 → 20 May 2022
Event Vincent Maisonneuve Fluorinated materials as positive electrodes for Li- and Na-Ion Seminar 13 Feb 2023 17:00 - 18:00
Event Jean-Marie Tarascon AMXO4 polyanionic insertion materials with the emergence of LiFePO4 and its LiFe1-xMnxPO4 derivatives Lecture 13 Feb 2023 16:00 - 17:00
Event Dominique Charpin Families and gods Lecture Religion is most often studied through the lens of official worship. We'll be looking at the intimacy of families, observing domestic spaces reserved for worship (" chapels ") and family devotions through the legends of cylinder … 13 Feb 2023 11:00 - 12:00
Event Guy Bunin Many-Species Dynamics in Ecosystems Seminar Interactions between species in nature can lead to fluctuations in population sizes, as for example in a two-species predator-prey system. What dynamical behavior should we expect when many species are involved, as is often the case in nature? I will … 13 Feb 2023 11:15 - 12:15
Series Biodiversity dynamics and evolution Tatiana Giraud, chair Biodiversity and ecosystems Seminar 21 Feb 2022 → 11 Apr 2022
Event Bernard Derrida Asymmetric neural networks and random automata Lecture 13 Feb 2023 09:30 - 11:00
Series Biodiversity dynamics and evolution Tatiana Giraud, chair Biodiversity and ecosystems Lecture The current threats to biodiversity are manifold. To conserve biodiversity and the countless services it provides, we need to understand how biodiversity was formed and what factors influence its dynamics. Evolutionary theory offers an extremely powerful … 21 Feb 2022 → 11 Apr 2022
Event Sylvain Charlat The emergence of Darwinian individuality : towards a meta-evolutionary perspective Seminar Abstract From intragenomic conflicts to mutualistic symbioses, biological interactions invite us to question the foundations of a rarely-explained concept that is nonetheless essential to Darwinian reasoning : the individual. The individual as " level of … 13 Feb 2023 11:00 - 12:00
Event Virginie Courtier-Orgogozo The living world is embedded in a historical process Lecture The machine metaphor does not apply well to living elements. Every cell derives from a cell. Every living thing derives from another living thing. The future dynamics of an ecosystem can only be understood in the light of its past history. Synthetic … 13 Feb 2023 10:00 - 11:00
Event Pedro Arrojo-Agudo Water commoditization and the human right to drinking water and sanitation Seminar Abstract Although water is essential to life, it is often regarded as an economic good that must be managed according to the logic of the market. This commodification of water carries risks and impacts on respect for human rights to drinking water and … 10 Feb 2023 11:00 - 12:00