Share Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Threads Copy url Search results Search 24439 results Filters Content type Content type (-) Lessons (24439) News (1652) People (1345) Chair (359) Editions (351) Page (230) Research (27) Library (14) Annual Chair (12) Award (6) Active filters Lessons Series Study of Byzantine papyri in relation to the lecture topic Jean-Luc Fournet, chair Written Culture in Late Antiquity and Byzantine Papyrology Seminar 30 Jan 2020 → 12 Mar 2020 Series Claude Lévi-Strauss - Thinking about the world differently Social Anthropology Laboratory (LAS) Symposium Program International symposium in tribute to Claude Lévi-Strauss on the 10th anniversary of his death. Alongside the illustrious founding figures of the social sciences who taught at the École pratique des hautes études - Mauss, Durkheim, Dumézil - … 10 Dec 2019 Event Stephen Barker Global Expressivism and Truth-Bearers Symposium Abstract I tentatively explore in an informal way the concept of global expressivism and focus in particular on expressivism about meaning attributions and truth. I indicate that expressivists about meaning should not deny that there are meanings-they … 18 Jun 2021 12:00 - 13:30 Event Mitchell Green On the Semanticization of Force Symposium Abstract Recent literature has seen a quickening of interest in ways of domesticating illocutionary force in semantic terms. One line of thought takes inspiration from Chierchia and McConnell Ginet ( Meaning and Grammar , 2000) who influentially … 17 Jun 2021 15:45 - 17:00 Event Michael Schmitz The Content of Force Symposium Abstract A dualism can be characterized as the exaggeration of a distinction, so that it is not intelligible anymore how the opposed entities can function together and play the roles they are naturally thought to have. Recently Peter Hanks and François … 17 Jun 2021 14:00 - 15:15 Event Eric Mandelbaum Belief: the Primitive Cognitive Relation Symposium Abstract Common forms of functionalism hold that one cannot have any types of propositional attitude without having a whole suite of them. Thus, one couldn't (e.g.) have beliefs but not have desires, hopes, wishes, and the like. Accordingly, it is … 17 Jun 2021 11:00 - 12:15 Series Living in the world's library William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Opening lecture 23 Jan 2020 Event Indrek Reiland What Is It to Say that "p"? Symposium Abstract Many philosophers of language think that in using a declarative sentence "p" with its meaning in a language, one thereby performs the meaning-generated speech act of saying that p. The same goes for interrogative and imperative sentences and the … 16 Jun 2021 17:15 - 18:30 Event Silver Bronzo Assertion and Composition Symposium Abstract This talk connects two questions that are seldom brought together: (1) whether propositional embedding requires a force/content distinction; and (2) what kind of compositional model applies to non-atomic propositions. It has three main goals. … 16 Jun 2021 15:30 - 16:45 Series Gods, daimones, heroes (2) Vinciane Pirenne-Delforge, chair Religion, History and Society in the Ancient Greek World Lecture The plurality of the superhuman world of the Greeks is defined by a multiplicity of divine and heroic figures. But what makes a god or a hero? How can we circumscribe these general categories attested in ancient documentation and widely used by modern … 23 Jan 2020 → 15 Jun 2020 Event Eleni Diamanti Updates on Paris Hub Symposium Abstract In this talk, I will explain the evolution of PCQT (formerly PCQC), the Parisian hub for quantum technologies, in the context of the national "Plan … 18 Jun 2021 17:20 - 17:40 Event Félicien Appas Flexible Entanglement-Distribution Network with an AlGaAs chip for Secure Communications Symposium Abstract Quantum communication networks enable applications ranging from highly secure communica-tion to clock synchronization and distributed quantum computing. Miniaturized, flexible, and cost-efficient resources will be key elements for ensuring the … 18 Jun 2021 16:20 - 17:20 Event Nathan Shettell A Cryptographic Approach to Quantum Metrology Symposium Abstract Quantum metrology is widely accepted as one of the most advanced pillars of quantum information, where quantum effects lead to enhanced precision measurements of unknown quantities. On the other hand, quantum cryptography uses quantum systems to … 18 Jun 2021 15:00 - 15:40 Series Multiscale models and convolutional neural networks Stéphane Mallat, chair Data science Seminar 22 Jan 2020 → 11 Mar 2020 Event David Barral Nonlinear Waveguide Arrays and Triple Photons: Gaussian and Non-gaussian Resources for Continuous-Variable Quantum Information Symposium Abstract In this talk I will present the research I carried out along the last few years as postdoc at the Centre de Nanosciences et de Nanotechnologies (C2N, Université Paris-Saclay). I will start introducing basic concepts of quantum optics, continuous … 18 Jun 2021 14:00 - 15:00 Series Multiscale models and convolutional neural networks Stéphane Mallat, chair Data science Lecture The lecture focused on the analysis of the approximation properties of convolutional neural networks, in relation to the a priori information available. To overcome the curse of high dimensionality, networks must exploit strong forms of regularity. In … 22 Jan 2020 → 15 Jun 2020 Event Léo Colisson Non-Destructive Zero-Knowledge Proofs on Quantum States, and Multi-Party Generation of Authorized Hidden GHZ States Symposium Abstract Due to the special no-cloning principle, quantum states appear to be very useful in cryptography. But this very same property also has drawbacks: when receiving a quantum state, it is nearly impossible for the receiver to efficiently check … 18 Jun 2021 11:40 - 12:20 Series Soft Chemistry 2020 Clément Sanchez, chair Hybrid materials chemistry Lecture 21 Jan 2020 → 25 Feb 2020 Event Pierre-Emmanuel Emeriau Witnessing Wigner Negativity Symposium Abstract Negativity of the Wigner function is arguably one of the most striking non-classical features of quantum states. Beyond its fundamental relevance, it is also a necessary resource for quantum speedup with continuous variables. As quantum … 17 Jun 2021 17:00 - 17:40 Event Robert Booth Outcome Determinism in Measurement-Based Quantum Computing with Qudits Symposium Abstract In measurement-based quantum computing (MBQC), computation is carried out by a sequence of measurements and corrections on an entangled state. Flow, and related concepts, are powerful techniques for characterising the dependence of the … 17 Jun 2021 16:20 - 17:00 Event Jonas Landman Recent Quantum Algorithms for Machine Learning and Neural Networks Symposium Abstract In recent years, many quantum machine learning algorithms have been proposed that can potentially offer significant speedup over corresponding classical algorithms. In this talk, we will discuss what is needed for a full-scale, fault-tolerant, … 17 Jun 2021 15:00 - 15:40 Event Ivan Šupić Quantum Networks Self-Test all Entangled States Symposium Abstract Inferring the underlying physical state of a system from measurement results is a fundamental task in physics. Remarkably, quantum mechanics enables the strongest form of inference: there exist states known to be fully characterized (up to local … 17 Jun 2021 14:00 - 15:00 Event Federico Centrone Charging Batteries with Quantum Squeezing Symposium Abstract Quantum physics proved to have an edge for outstanding applications in computation and cryptography. Whether quantum technologies can help us facing the forthcoming energetic crisis remains, however, an open question. In this work, we analyze the … 17 Jun 2021 11:40 - 12:20 Event Ishikawa Hajime Some thoughts on the Monastery of the Great Repentance Symposium 12 Jun 2021 10:50 - 11:10 Pagination First page « First Previous page ‹‹ … Page 290 Page 291 Page 292 Page 293 Page 294 Page 295 Page 296 Page 297 Page 298 … Next page ›› Last page Last »
Series Study of Byzantine papyri in relation to the lecture topic Jean-Luc Fournet, chair Written Culture in Late Antiquity and Byzantine Papyrology Seminar 30 Jan 2020 → 12 Mar 2020
Series Claude Lévi-Strauss - Thinking about the world differently Social Anthropology Laboratory (LAS) Symposium Program International symposium in tribute to Claude Lévi-Strauss on the 10th anniversary of his death. Alongside the illustrious founding figures of the social sciences who taught at the École pratique des hautes études - Mauss, Durkheim, Dumézil - … 10 Dec 2019
Event Stephen Barker Global Expressivism and Truth-Bearers Symposium Abstract I tentatively explore in an informal way the concept of global expressivism and focus in particular on expressivism about meaning attributions and truth. I indicate that expressivists about meaning should not deny that there are meanings-they … 18 Jun 2021 12:00 - 13:30
Event Mitchell Green On the Semanticization of Force Symposium Abstract Recent literature has seen a quickening of interest in ways of domesticating illocutionary force in semantic terms. One line of thought takes inspiration from Chierchia and McConnell Ginet ( Meaning and Grammar , 2000) who influentially … 17 Jun 2021 15:45 - 17:00
Event Michael Schmitz The Content of Force Symposium Abstract A dualism can be characterized as the exaggeration of a distinction, so that it is not intelligible anymore how the opposed entities can function together and play the roles they are naturally thought to have. Recently Peter Hanks and François … 17 Jun 2021 14:00 - 15:15
Event Eric Mandelbaum Belief: the Primitive Cognitive Relation Symposium Abstract Common forms of functionalism hold that one cannot have any types of propositional attitude without having a whole suite of them. Thus, one couldn't (e.g.) have beliefs but not have desires, hopes, wishes, and the like. Accordingly, it is … 17 Jun 2021 11:00 - 12:15
Series Living in the world's library William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Opening lecture 23 Jan 2020
Event Indrek Reiland What Is It to Say that "p"? Symposium Abstract Many philosophers of language think that in using a declarative sentence "p" with its meaning in a language, one thereby performs the meaning-generated speech act of saying that p. The same goes for interrogative and imperative sentences and the … 16 Jun 2021 17:15 - 18:30
Event Silver Bronzo Assertion and Composition Symposium Abstract This talk connects two questions that are seldom brought together: (1) whether propositional embedding requires a force/content distinction; and (2) what kind of compositional model applies to non-atomic propositions. It has three main goals. … 16 Jun 2021 15:30 - 16:45
Series Gods, daimones, heroes (2) Vinciane Pirenne-Delforge, chair Religion, History and Society in the Ancient Greek World Lecture The plurality of the superhuman world of the Greeks is defined by a multiplicity of divine and heroic figures. But what makes a god or a hero? How can we circumscribe these general categories attested in ancient documentation and widely used by modern … 23 Jan 2020 → 15 Jun 2020
Event Eleni Diamanti Updates on Paris Hub Symposium Abstract In this talk, I will explain the evolution of PCQT (formerly PCQC), the Parisian hub for quantum technologies, in the context of the national "Plan … 18 Jun 2021 17:20 - 17:40
Event Félicien Appas Flexible Entanglement-Distribution Network with an AlGaAs chip for Secure Communications Symposium Abstract Quantum communication networks enable applications ranging from highly secure communica-tion to clock synchronization and distributed quantum computing. Miniaturized, flexible, and cost-efficient resources will be key elements for ensuring the … 18 Jun 2021 16:20 - 17:20
Event Nathan Shettell A Cryptographic Approach to Quantum Metrology Symposium Abstract Quantum metrology is widely accepted as one of the most advanced pillars of quantum information, where quantum effects lead to enhanced precision measurements of unknown quantities. On the other hand, quantum cryptography uses quantum systems to … 18 Jun 2021 15:00 - 15:40
Series Multiscale models and convolutional neural networks Stéphane Mallat, chair Data science Seminar 22 Jan 2020 → 11 Mar 2020
Event David Barral Nonlinear Waveguide Arrays and Triple Photons: Gaussian and Non-gaussian Resources for Continuous-Variable Quantum Information Symposium Abstract In this talk I will present the research I carried out along the last few years as postdoc at the Centre de Nanosciences et de Nanotechnologies (C2N, Université Paris-Saclay). I will start introducing basic concepts of quantum optics, continuous … 18 Jun 2021 14:00 - 15:00
Series Multiscale models and convolutional neural networks Stéphane Mallat, chair Data science Lecture The lecture focused on the analysis of the approximation properties of convolutional neural networks, in relation to the a priori information available. To overcome the curse of high dimensionality, networks must exploit strong forms of regularity. In … 22 Jan 2020 → 15 Jun 2020
Event Léo Colisson Non-Destructive Zero-Knowledge Proofs on Quantum States, and Multi-Party Generation of Authorized Hidden GHZ States Symposium Abstract Due to the special no-cloning principle, quantum states appear to be very useful in cryptography. But this very same property also has drawbacks: when receiving a quantum state, it is nearly impossible for the receiver to efficiently check … 18 Jun 2021 11:40 - 12:20
Series Soft Chemistry 2020 Clément Sanchez, chair Hybrid materials chemistry Lecture 21 Jan 2020 → 25 Feb 2020
Event Pierre-Emmanuel Emeriau Witnessing Wigner Negativity Symposium Abstract Negativity of the Wigner function is arguably one of the most striking non-classical features of quantum states. Beyond its fundamental relevance, it is also a necessary resource for quantum speedup with continuous variables. As quantum … 17 Jun 2021 17:00 - 17:40
Event Robert Booth Outcome Determinism in Measurement-Based Quantum Computing with Qudits Symposium Abstract In measurement-based quantum computing (MBQC), computation is carried out by a sequence of measurements and corrections on an entangled state. Flow, and related concepts, are powerful techniques for characterising the dependence of the … 17 Jun 2021 16:20 - 17:00
Event Jonas Landman Recent Quantum Algorithms for Machine Learning and Neural Networks Symposium Abstract In recent years, many quantum machine learning algorithms have been proposed that can potentially offer significant speedup over corresponding classical algorithms. In this talk, we will discuss what is needed for a full-scale, fault-tolerant, … 17 Jun 2021 15:00 - 15:40
Event Ivan Šupić Quantum Networks Self-Test all Entangled States Symposium Abstract Inferring the underlying physical state of a system from measurement results is a fundamental task in physics. Remarkably, quantum mechanics enables the strongest form of inference: there exist states known to be fully characterized (up to local … 17 Jun 2021 14:00 - 15:00
Event Federico Centrone Charging Batteries with Quantum Squeezing Symposium Abstract Quantum physics proved to have an edge for outstanding applications in computation and cryptography. Whether quantum technologies can help us facing the forthcoming energetic crisis remains, however, an open question. In this work, we analyze the … 17 Jun 2021 11:40 - 12:20
Event Ishikawa Hajime Some thoughts on the Monastery of the Great Repentance Symposium 12 Jun 2021 10:50 - 11:10