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Showing posts from September, 2007

Global Pattern Formation and Ethnic/Cultural Violence

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Colleagues from NECSI just published this interesting paper: Global Pattern Formation and Ethnic/Cultural Violence M. Lim, R. Metzler, Y. Bar-Yam, Science 317, 5844 (2007). Download PDF (requires susbscription) Download supplementary materials Listen to the Science podcast interview with Yaneer Bar-Yam Press Release News Articles Previous Work: Global Control, Ethnic Violence and Terrorism, from Making Things Work , Knowledge Press, Cambridge, MA (2005). view PDF Abstract We identify a process of global pattern formation that causes regions to differentiate by culture. Violence arises at boundaries between regions that are not sufficiently well defined. We model cultural differentiation as a separation of groups whose members prefer similar neighbors with a characteristic group size at which violence occurs. Application of this model to the area of the for

Paper Update: The World as Evolving Information

After substantial feedback, I uploaded a new version of the paper: The World as Evolving Information Carlos Gershenson Abstract: This paper discusses the benefits of describing the world as information, especially in the study of the evolution of life and cognition. Traditional studies encounter problems because it is difficult to describe life and cognition in terms of matter and energy, since their laws are valid only at the physical scale. However, if matter and energy, as well as life and cognition, are described in terms of information, evolution can be described consistently as information becoming more complex. The paper presents five tentative laws of information, valid at multiple scales, which are generalizations of Darwinian, cybernetic, thermodynamic, and complexity principles. These are further used to discuss the notions of life and cognition and their evolution. Full paper here .