Sessions
The fet11 conference programme will feature 30 scientific sessions of which six are dedicated to FET Flagship Pilots. From the more than 80 submitted proposals the programme committee has selected the most exciting based on the following criteria:
- novelty and interest of proposed topic, including possible creation of new area or transformation of existing area
- quality of proposed speakers
- relevance to Future and Emerging Information Technologies
- impact on science, technology or science policy
- building of new collaborations, in particular across disciplines.
Session title | Contact | Date time (tentative) | Room |
---|---|---|---|
Badalotti, Enzo |
Wednesday 04 May 14:30 |
Brahms |
|
Trappl, Robert |
Thursday 05 May 14:00 |
Brahms |
|
Building Future Information Technologies with Artificial Atoms in Diamond |
Roch, Jean-Francois |
Wednesday 04 May 14:30 |
Bartók |
Arndt, Markus |
Friday 06 May 10:45 |
Bartók |
|
Quantum Effects in Biology and their Applications to Light Harvesting and Sensing |
Omar, Yasser |
Thursday 05 May 14:00 |
Pátria |
Atoms, Photons and Entanglement for Quantum Information Technology |
Arimondo, Ennio |
Wednesday 04 May 14:30 |
Lehár |
Perez, David |
Thursday 05 May 11:00 |
Pátria |
|
Lane, David |
Friday 06 May 10:45 |
Mozart |
|
Kondor, Imre |
Thursday 05 May 16:00 |
Mozart |
|
Grollier, Julie |
Wednesday 04 May 14:30 |
Liszt |
|
Endriss, Ulle |
Wednesday 04 May 14:30 |
Mozart |
|
Szathmáry, Eörs |
Wednesday 04 May 14:30 |
Pátria |
|
Willies, Jennifer |
Thursday 05 May 11:00 |
Brahms |
|
Giugliano, Michele |
Thursday 05 May 11:00 |
Liszt |
|
Kohlhammer, Jörn |
Thursday 05 May 11:00 |
Mozart |
|
Biological and Chemical Information Technology: Bottom-Up Chemistry and Synthetic Biology |
Amos, Martyn |
Thursday 05 May 14:00 |
Liszt |
Vassanelli, Stefano |
Thursday 05 May 14:00 |
Mozart |
|
The City in Cinema: How Popular Culture can Influence Research Agendas |
Helgason, Ingi |
Thursday 05 May 16:00 |
Brahms |
Talking with Chemicals: Challenges of Biomimetic Infochemical Communication |
Racz, Zoltan |
Thursday 05 May 16:00 |
Liszt |
Iida, Fumiya |
Thursday 05 May 16:00 |
Pátria |
|
Gammaitoni, Luca |
Friday 06 May 10:45 |
Lehár |
|
Ferscha, Alois |
Friday 06 May 10:45 |
Brahms |
|
Zarándy, Ákos |
Friday 06 May 10:45 |
Liszt |
|
Robots Interacting with Humans – Embodied Intelligence for Better Robots |
Albu-Schäffer, Alin |
Friday 06 May 10:45 |
Pátria |
Lehrach, Hans | Thursday 05 May 14:00 |
Lehár |
|
Robocom - The Dream of Robot Companions for Citizens (FET Flagship Pilot) |
Thursday 05 May 11:00 |
Lehár |
|
Thursday 05 May 14:00 |
Bartók |
||
Jaymes, Karin; Buzzi, Isabelle |
Thursday 05 May 11:00 |
Bartók |
|
Graphene-Driven Revolutions in ICT and Beyond (FET Flagship Pilot) |
Kinaret, Jari |
Thursday 05 May 16:00 |
Bartók |
Thursday 05 May 16:00 |
Lehár |
ITFoM - IT Future of Medicine (FET Flagship Pilot)
As data-intensive analysis and computer intensive modelling technologies become common clinical practice, IT capacity and organisation will become key limiting factors in medicine. Indeed the development of a new, data-rich, individualised medicine, likely to surpass the demands of all other IT development fields.
Experts in the field will outline what is being done to develop this IT driven, data rich, individualised medicine of the future.
Speakers
- Hans Lehrach, Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Berlin, Germany
- Hans Westerhoff, University of Manchester, UK
- Kurt Zatloukal, Medical University of Graz, Austria
- Tim Hubbard, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, UK
- Angela Brand, Maastricht University, The Netherlands
- Peter Boyle, International Prevention Research Institute, Lyon, France
Contact: Hans Lehrach
Primary affiliation: Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Berlin
Web Site: http://www.molgen.mpg.de/research/lehrach/
Download the extended abstract in pdf
Room: Lehár
Date: Thursday 05 May, 14:00
Robocom - The Dream of Robot Companions for Citizens (FET Flagship Pilot)
Discover how a new generation of robot technologies is working to create Robot Companions to help out at home, at work and in hospitals. With their soft bodies and new levels of perceptual, cognitive and emotive capabilities, Robot Companions will be aware of their physical and social world and respond accordingly.
The session - in form of a "live science talk-show" will feature real robots as well as video and other multi-media material to demonstrate the Robot Companions vision.
Speakers
- Paolo Dario, Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy
- Barbara Mazzolai, Center of MicroBioRobotics, IIT@SSSA, Italy
- Giorgio Metta, Italian Institute of Technology, Italy
- Pieter Roelfsema, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, The Netherlands
- Rolf Pfeifer, Department of Informatics, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
- Giulio Sandini, Italian Institute of Technology, Italy
- Jackie Scully, PEALS (Policy, Ethics & Life Sciences) Research Centre, Newcastle University, UK
- Wolfram Schultz, University of Cambridge, UK
- Paul Verschure, University Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain
Session organiser: Paolo Dario, Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy
Download the extended abstract in pdf
Room: Lehár
Date: Thursday 05 May, 11:00
The FuturICT Knowledge Accelerator: Creating Socially Interactive Information Technologies for a Sustainable Future (FET Flagship Pilot)
Experts from the FuturICT flagship pilot project will discuss its aims to understand and manage complex, global, socially interactive systems, with a focus on sustainability and resilience.
Integrating ICT, Complexity Science and the Social Sciences will create a paradigm shift, facilitating a symbiotic co-evolution of ICT and society
Download the extended abstract in pdf
Speakers
- Steven Bishop, University College, London, UK
- David Price, University College, London, UK
- Roland Siegwart, ETH, Zurich, Switzerland
- Dirk Helbing, ETH, Zurich, Switzerland
- Paul Lukowicz, University of Passau, Germany
- Rosaria Conte, Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies, Rome, Italy
- Lászlo Barabási, University of Notre Dame, Indiana, USA
Room: Bartók
Date: Thursday 05 May, 14:00
Guardian Angels for a Smarter Life (FET Flagship Pilot)
Discover the key concepts and technologies of Guardian Angels autonomous systems-of-systems featuring sensing, computation, and communication beyond human capabilities. Find out how Guardian Angels will provide assistance to people from infancy to old age. Foreseen are individual health support, monitoring of ambient conditions for environmental threats, and emotional man-machine interfaces. A series of selected talks will present the features of systems-of-systems and the major challenges of zero power requirements as these Guardian Angels will scavenge for energy and they will exploit ultra low power technologies. Applications scenaria will be summarized by a short movie.
Speakers
- Hervé Fanet, CEA-LETI, France: "Technological platform: novel functionality and disruption versus reality check"
- Francis Balestra, SINANO, France: "Fundamental scientific challenges and limits for ultra low energy computation"
- Christofer Hierold, ETHZ, Switzerland: "Ultra low power nano sensors"
- Enrico Sangiorgi, IUNET, Italy: "Fundamental scientific challenges and limits for energy harvesting"
- Kevin Sivula, EPFL, Switzerland: "Energy conversion inspired by nature"
- Georges Gielen, KUL, Belgium: "Design strategies for ultra low power systems-of-systems"
- Daniel Bertrand, HiQScreen, Switzerland: "Guardian Angels: breakthrough toward e-Health"
- Robert Plana, CNRS, France: "Energy efficient communications"
- Adrian Ionescu, EPFL, Switzerland: "One billion Euros for Zero Power Guardian Angels?"
Download the extended abstract in pdf
Room: Bartók
Date: Thursday 05 May, 11:00
Graphene-Driven Revolutions in ICT and Beyond (FET Flagship Pilot)
Find out how graphene has the potential to make a profound impact in ICT. Integrating graphene components with silicon-based electronics, and gradually replacing silicon in some applications, allows not only substantial performance improvements, but also enables completely new applications.
The session will feature presentations on graphene science and technology and on the organisation of a pilot project to develop the research agenda for the flagship initiative: Graphene-Driven Revolutions in ICT and Beyond.
Speakers
- Andrea Ferrari, Cambridge University, UK
- Jari Kinaret, Chalmers University, Sweden
- Vladimir Falko, Lancaster University, UK
- Jani Kivioja, NOKIA, Finland
Session organiser: Jari Kinaret
Primary affiliation: Chalmers University, Sweden
Download the extended abstract in pdf
Room: Bartók
Date: Thursday 05 May, 16:00
The Human Brain Project (FET Flagship Pilot)
Find out how the Human Brain Project is working to create the informatics, modeling and supercomputing technologies required to build biologically detailed models of the human brain.
The HBP team will present the project's goals, rationale and strategy and explore its its potential impact, including the possibility of a new generation of brain-enabled robots.
Speakers
- Henry Markram, EPFL, Switzerland: Introducing the HBP
- Sten Grillner, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden: Brain simulation for a new kind of neuroscience
- Thomas Lippert, Jülich Supercomputing Centre, Germany: Brain simulation and the future of supercomputing
- Richard Frackowiak, CHUV, Switzerland: Brain simulation for the diagnosis and treatment of brain disease
- Kris Verstreken, IMEC, Leuven, Belgium: New interfaces to the brain
- Karlheinz Meier, University of Heidelberg, Germany: Brain simulation as a source of neuromorphic technology
- Alois Knoll, Technical University Munich, Germany: Brain simulation and robotics
Download the extended abstract in pdf
Room: Lehár
Date: Thursday 05 May, 16:00
The Future Museum
Find out how innovations from the worlds of ICT and multimedia have revolutionised the way in which museums operate. Now imagine how museums could look in the future. The Future Museum proposes a breakthrough in the museum concept opening up the possibility of live interaction between scientists, artists, designers, intellectuals and the wider population.
Speakers
- Enzo Badalotti, Mediacontech, Milano, Italy
- Luca de Biase, Nova-il Sole 24 ore, Italy
- Peter Greenaway, Artist and director, UK
- Sander ban der Leeuw, Department of Anthropology Arizona State University, USA
Session organiser: Enzo Badalotti
Primary affiliation: Mediacontech, Milano, Italy
Position: CEO Mediacontech Group
Web Site: http://www.mediacontech.it
Room: Brahms
Date: Wednesday 04 May, 14:30
Robots as Companions: What can we Learn from Servants and Companions in Litterature, Theater, and Film?
Truffaldino, Sancho Pansa, Figaro, Jeeves, Schwejk, and many, many more ... authors, dramatists, film makers have given us rich pictures of servants and their masters. The organisers invite all conference participants to experience and to explore their influence on and significance for the future of social robotics.
Speakers
- Zsófia Ruttkay, University of Twente, The Netherlands,
- Markus Krajewski, Bauhaus-University, Weimar, Germany
- Virgil Widrich, University of Applied Arts, Vienna, Austria
Session organiser: Robert Trappl
Primary affiliation: Austrian Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence, Vienna, Austria
Position: Head of Institute
Web Site: http://www.ofai.at
Room: Brahms
Date: Thursday 05 May, 14:00
Building Future Information Technologies with Artificial Atoms in Diamond
Find out how defects in diamonds can be put to use for the development of future nano-electronic devices. The session will be accompanied by a demonstration experiment to show how the magnetic resonance of the nitrogen-vacancy colour centre can be optically detected and applied to the measurement of weak magnetic fields. Speakers of the session are involved in several EU-funded projects illustrating important contribution made by the European Commission in the development of strategic technologies.
Speakers
- Jean-Francois Roch, Ecole Normale Supérieure de Cachan, France: "Overview of the field"
- Daniel Twitchen, Element 6, UK: "The engineering of diamond material based on CVD growth, and defect incorporation"
- Christian Eggeling, Max-Planck-Institut für biophysikalische Chemie, Göttingen, Germany: "Recent advances in optical 'nanoscopy'"
- Fedor Jelezko, Universität Ulm, Germany: "How NV centers can be used for sensing magnetic and electric fields"
Session organiser: Jean-Francois Roch
Primary affiliation: Ecole Normale Supérieure de Cachan, Cachan, France
Room: Bartók
Date: Wednesday 04 May, 14:30
Fundamental Frontiers of Quantum Science and Technology
The session focuses on modern advances in the foundations of quantum physics and a selection of routes towards new quantum technologies. It explores the current frontiers in basic research with complex quantum systems, covering photonic, atomic, molecular and micromechanical systems as well as challenges for quantum theory.
Speakers
- Anton Zeilinger, University of IQOQI, Vienna, Austria: "Quantum science and technology: exciting fundamental challenges and opportunities"
- Domenico Giulini, University of Hannover, Germany: "The impact of gravity on quantum evolution"
- Jean-Michel Raimond, ENS Paris, France: "Exploring the frontiers of the quantum world with atoms and cavities"
- Angelo Bassi, University of Trieste, Italy: "Spontaneous collapse models in the light of modern experiments"
- Antoine Heidmann, ENS Paris, France: "Radiation pressure, photons and mechanical resonators: towards quantum optomechanics"
- Markus Arndt, University of Vienna and Vienna Center for Quantum Science and Technology, Austria: "Quantum information in molecular quantum optics: from Schrödinger cats to quantum sensing"
Session organiser: Markus Arndt
Primary affiliation: University of Vienna and Vienna Center for Quantum Science and Technology, Vienna, Austria
Web Site: http://www.quantumnano.at
Room: Bartók
Date: Friday 06 May, 10:45
Quantum Effects in Biology and their Applications to Light Harvesting and Sensing
What is the role that quantum effects play in biological functions, and how can this understanding help us develop novel devices, namely more efficient solar cells and finer sensing?
Leading experts in the field address the question of detecting and understanding the role of quantum effects in biological systems, including its more fundamental and theoretical aspects.
Speakers
- Greg Engel, University of Chicago, USA
- Martin Plenio, University of Ulm, Germany
- Luca Turin, BSRC Fleming, Athens, Greece
Session organiser: Yasser Omar
Primary affiliation: CEMAPRE, ISEG, Technical University of Lisbon, Portugal, Lisbon, Portugal
Room: Pátria
Date: Thursday 05 May, 14:00
Atoms, Photons and Entanglement for Quantum Information Technology
Crucial challenges in the implementation of Quantum Information Technologies call for smart strategies. This discussion aims to provide an overview of recent progress achieved by the combination of different photon–quantum matter approaches towards finding solutions. Three talks, delivered by international leaders in the field, will cover a variety of experimental and theoretical features. A main focus of the presentations will be to outline future scenarios, to address the problems in play and to look at the progress made so far meeting these challenges.
Speakers
- Eugene Polzik: "status of the art in the realization of quantum interfaces and quantum memories"
- Dieter Meschede: "discrete quantum simulations with neutral atoms"
- Julio Barreiro: "open systems quantum simulations with trapped ions"
Session organiser: Ennio Arimondo
Primary affiliation: Università di Pisa, Pisa, Italy
Room: Lehár
Date: Wednesday 04 May, 14:30
Complex Systems for an ICT-enabled Energy System
Learn more about the ways in which Complex Systems Science has a role to play in the modelling, control, simulation, and governance of the future Energy System. This session aims to lay the foundations for the creation of a new research community able to formulate innovative approaches in the area of energy system modelling and governance, paving the way for future European-scale initiatives.
Speakers
- Pablo Viejo , European Institute for Energy Research, Germany;
- Carlos Álvarez, The Innaxis Research Institute, Madrid, Spain
- Nikos Hatziargyriou, National Technical University of Athens, Greece
Session organiser: David Perez
Primary affiliation: The Innaxis Research Institute, Madrid, Spain
Position: Director
Web Site: http://www.innaxis.org
Room: Pátria
Date: Thursday 05 May, 11:00
Innovation, Sustainability and ICT
Cascades of innovation can take society in directions that nobody intended beforehand and that are very hard to adjust en route. They combine force with a lack of control in a way that is unsettling even when the effects seem mostly positive, but can be disastrous when their destructive potentials dominate. Find out what steps are being taken to consolidate a deeper understanding of the dynamics of innovation cascades and the implications of this understanding for the design of innovation policy processes that monitor them.
Speakers
- David Lane, University of Modena and European Center for Living Technology, Italy
- Sander van der Leeuw, School of Sustainability, Arizona State University and Santa Fe Institute, USA: core ideas of INSITE on Innovation and Sustainability
- Claes Andersson, Chalmers Institute of Technology, Sweden: Modeling pragmatics for innovation policy
- Filippo Addarii, Euclid Network, London, UK
- Alberto Massini-Zannetti, TheHub, London, UK and Milano, Italy: Social innovation
Session organiser: David Lane
Primary affiliation: University of Modena, Italy
Web Site: http://www.cei.unimo.it
Room: Mozart
Date: Friday 06 May, 10:45
Agent Based Modeling
What are the achievements and possibilities for Agent Based Modeling, as applied in the context of social sciences, economics and finance, and what are its weak points?
Leading exponents in the field will lead a theoretical discussion while the demands and expectations of practitioners and decision makers will be highlighted by a senior European official.
Speakers
- Nigel Gilbert, University of Surrey, UK: "Understanding housing markets with agents"
- Domenico Delli Gatti, Catholic University of Milan, Italy: "Macroeconomics from the Bottom Up"
- Doyne Farmer, Santa Fe Institute, New Mexico, USA: "Agent-based modeling of financial stability: A current example and a vision of the future"
- Werner Röger, DSGE modeling unit, Directorate General for Economic and Financial Affairs, European Commission
Session organiser: Imre Kondor
Primary affiliation: Department of Physics of Complex Systems, Eötvös University, BUDAPEST, Hungary
Position: professor of physics
Room: Mozart
Date: Thursday 05 May, 16:00
Artificial Synapses: Memristors
Can we break/repair the neural code by only reading/writing high-resolution precise intracellular ‘words’ spoken by single neurons? Or is it necessary to record/replay low-resolution ‘pictures’ of the extracellular population activity, as it integrates information both in time and space ? Experimental brain scientists, computational neuroscientists, experts in enabling technologies for invasive neuroprosthetics and who ever is interested are invited to join the debate following presentation by experts in the field.
Speakers
- Julie Grollier, CNRS, Palaiseau, France: "An introduction to memristors"
- Bernabe Linares-Barranco, IMSE-CNM-CSIC, Sevilla, Spain: "How to compute with memristors : dedicated bio-inspired architectures"
- Themis Prodromakis, Imperial College London, UK: "Titanium di-oxide memristor"
- Vincent Garcia, CNRS, Palaiseau, France: "Ferroelectric memristor"
- Viktor Erokhin, University of Parma, Italy: "Organic memristor"
- André Chanthbouala, Thales-TRT, Palaiseau, France: "Spintronic memristor"
- Yusuf Leblebici, EPFL, Switzerland: "Silicon nanowire memristors and their applications for synaptic functions"
- Christian Gamrat, CEA List-Leti, Saclay, France: "Memristor: the ideal Synapse"
Session organiser: Julie Grollier
Primary affiliation: Unité Mixte de Physique CNRS-Thales, Palaiseau, France
Position: Researcher, coordinator of the NanoBrain ERC starting grant team
Web Site: http://www.trt.thalesgroup.com/ump-cnrs-thales/phonebook/grollier.htm
Room: Liszt
Date: Wednesday 04 May, 14:30
Computational Social Choice
How should we aggregate the preferences of a group of individuals so as to arrive at an adequate collective preference, which can serve as the basis for making acceptable group decisions? This session will provide an introduction to the field of Computational Social Choice and demonstrate how it can contribute to addressing some of the major challenges associated with realising the next generation of decision making technologies in areas such as e-governance, electronic commerce, the semantic web, school choice, or transplant organ allocation systems.
Speakers
- Peter Biro, Institute of Economics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary
- Ioannis Caragiannis, Department of Computer Engineering and Informatics, University of Patras
Greece
- Britta Dorn, Faculty of Mathematics and Economics, University of Ulm, Germany
-Ulle Endriss, Institute for Logic, Language and Computation, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- Jerome Lang, LAMSADE Laboratory, CNRS and Paris-Dauphine University, France
- Francesca Rossi, Department of Pure and Applied Mathematics, University of Padova, Italy
Session organiser: Ulle Endriss
Primary affiliation: ILLC, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Position: Assistant Professor
Web Site: http://www.illc.uva.nl/
Room: Mozart
Date: Wednesday 04 May, 14:30
Evolvability of Natural and Artificial Systems
In what sense is natural evolution open-ended and can this be replicated in artificial evolution? A panel of experts will attempt to answer this and other questions as part of a session on the evolvability of natural and artificial systems.
Speakers
- Dario Floreano, EPFL, Switzerland
- Mauro Santos, University of Barcelona, Spain
- Chrisantha Fernando, University of Sussex, UK
- George Kampis, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary
Session organiser: Eörs Szathmáry
Primary affiliation: Collegium Budapest (Institute for Advanced Study), Hungary
Web Site: http://www.colbud.hu
Room: Pátria
Date: Wednesday 04 May, 14:30
Heaven and Hell: Visions for Pervasive Adaptation
User heaven or user hell? Technology experts in artificial intelligence, adaptive systems, ambient environments and pervasive computing discuss the technological benefits and useful applications of pervasive adaptation, but also its potential threats. Based on themes from the PerAda book ‘This Pervasive day’, and featuring authors from the PerAda projects, it will appeal to anyone interested in the personal, social, economic and political impacts of pervasive, ubiquitous and adaptive computing.
Speakers
The session will be chaired by Ben Paechter, Edinburgh Napier University.
- Ben Paechter, Edinburgh Napier University, UK
- Jeremy Pitt, Imperial College London, UK
- Nikola Serbedzija, Fraunhofer FIRST, Germany
- Katina Michael, University of Wollongong, Australia
Session organiser: Jennifer Willies
Primary affiliation: Edinburgh Napier University, UK
Web Site: http://www.perada.eu
Room: Brahms
Date: Thursday 05 May, 11:00
From a Spike-Centered Brain Universe to its Underlying Synaptic Landscape: Future Technologies for Brain Reverse Engineering and Neuroprosthetic
Can we break/repair the neural code by only reading/writing high-resolution precise intracellular ‘words’ spoken by single neurons? Or is it necessary to record/replay low-resolution ‘pictures’ of the extracellular population activity, as it integrates information both in time and space ? Experimental brain scientists, computational neuroscientists, and experts in enabling technologies for invasive neuroprosthetics, and whoever is interested, are invited to join the debate following a presentation by experts in the field.
Speakers
- Luc Gentet, EPFL, Switzerland
- Michele Giugliano, University of Antwerp, Belgium
- Micha Spira, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
- John Simeral, Brown University, USA
Session organiser: Michele Giugliano
Primary affiliation: University of Antwerp, Belgium
Position: Professor
Web Site: http://www.ua.ac.be
Room: Liszt
Date: Thursday 05 May, 11:00
Solving Problems with Visual Analytics
In a world where we are bombarded by an increasing amount of data on a daily basis, time and money are wasted because we lack the ability to adequately deal with it. Visual analytics is an emerging research discipline which aims to make the best possible use of huge information loads in a wide variety of applications by appropriately combining the strengths of intelligent automatic data analysis with the visual perception and analysis capabilities of the user.
Speakers
- Daniel Keim, Computer Science department of the University of Konstanz, Germany
- Margit Pohl, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
- Gennady Andrienko, Fraunhofer Institute IAIS, Sankt Augustin, Germany
- Giuseppe Santucci, Department of Computer and System Science at the University of Rome "La Sapienza", Italy
Session organiser: Jörn Kohlhammer
Primary affiliation: Fraunhofer IGD, Darmstadt, Germany
Position: Head of Department
Web Site: http://www.igd.fraunhofer.de
Room: Mozart
Date: Thursday 05 May, 11:00
Biological and Chemical Information Technology: Bottom-Up Chemistry and Synthetic Biology
Biological and chemical information technology (bio/chem IT) is one of the most vibrant and important emerging research domains in recent years, especially with the growth of research into systems and synthetic biology, artificial cells, chemical information processing, micro-electro-mechanical systems, nanotechnology and artificial intelligence. This session will present scientific results in the field, focussing on bottom-up chemistry and synthetic biology. Particular attention will be paid to bio/chem IT outside Europe, through the presentation of our plenary speaker.
Speakers
Plenary speaker:
- Farren Isaacs, Yale University, USA
Short presentations will also be given by representatives of the current core COBRA project:
- Steen Rasmussen, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark
- John McCaskill, Ruhr University, Bochum, Germany
- Peter Dittrich, Friedrich Schiller University, Jena, Germany
- Martyn Amos, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK
Session organiser: Martyn Amos
Primary affiliation: Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK
Position: Reader in Novel Computation
Web Site: http://www.cobra-project.eu/fet11.html
Room: Liszt
Date: Thursday 05 May, 14:00
Brain-Chip Interfaces: The Present And The Future
Brain-chip interfacing is becoming a key and powerful technology with multiple applications to investigate neuronal and brain function and to develop new devices for therapy of neurological diseases.
This session focuses on recent achievements in Brain-Chip Interfacing and provides a general overview of world-wide progress in the field.
Speakers
- Roland Thewes, Technical University of Berlin, Germany
- Roeland Huys, IMEC, Leuven, Belgium
- Stefano Vassanelli, University of Padova, Italy
- Paul Verschure, University Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain
- Wolfgang Eberle, IMEC, Leuven, Belgium
Session organiser: Stefano Vassanelli
Primary affiliation: University of Padova, Italy
Position: Professor
Web Site: http://www.anatomiafisiologia.unipd.it/neurochip/Index.html
Room: Mozart
Date: Thursday 05 May, 14:00
The City in Cinema: How Popular Culture can Influence Research Agendas
Where can researchers find inspiration for the transformative applications, concepts and infrastructures that they believe will characterise the next decade? One approach to predicting the future is to reflect on the visions of the future that have been proposed in the past, and question how these visions are actively shaping our present. This session looks at the way in which cinema's portrayal of the future city has been a source of inspiration for scientists, technologists and commentators.
Speakers
- Michael Smyth, Edinburgh Napier University, UK
- Ingi Helgason, Edinburgh Napier University, UK
- Ivica Mitrović, Arts Academy, University of Split, Croatia
- Gianluca Zaffiro, Telecom Italia, Torino, Italy
Session organiser: Ingi Helgason
Primary affiliation: Edinburgh Napier University, UK
Position: Researcher
Room: Brahms
Date: Thursday 05 May, 16:00
Talking with Chemicals: Challenges of Biomimetic Infochemical Communication
Find out about a new form of biomimetic chemical communication with a demonstration involving both robots and insects. Speakers will provide an overview of the biological and technological inspiration for a project that aims to demonstrate how this new class of technology could be realized. Hear the latest advances and convergence of expertise in the fields of pheromone biochemistry, molecular biology, neuroscience, microengineering and bioelectronics.
Speakers
- Bill Hansson, Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Jena, Germany
- Paul Verschure, University Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain
- Shannon Olsson, Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Jena, Germany
- Zoltan Racz, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK
Session organiser: Zoltan Racz
Primary affiliation: University of Warwick, Coventry, UK
Position: Postdoctoral Research Associate
Web Site: http://go.warwick.ac.uk/ichem
Room: Liszt
Date: Thursday 05 May, 16:00
Soft Robotics: Theories and Technologies
In contrast to the conventional robotics research, the investigations of Soft Robotics focus on the use of soft and deformable materials in the robot bodies, dynamic changes of morphology and mechanical passive dynamics for agile motor capabilities, and sensory-motor control for gentle system- environment interactions. In this session, we discuss how Soft Robotics has been developed in the last decades, what progress have been made and what stage are we at now. This session brings together leading scientists to discuss strategic research collaborations together with important theoretical and technological issues which will lead to high impact applications and innovation in the near future.
Speakers
Plenary speaker:
- Hod Lipson, Cornell University, USA
Showcase of technologies:
- Cecilia Laschi, Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy
- Dario Floreano, EPFL, Switzerland
- Liyu Wang, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
- Fumiya Iida, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Panel discussion:
- Paolo Dario, Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy
- Rolf Pfeifer, University of Zurich, Switzerland
- Josh Bongard, University of Vermont, USA
Session organiser: Fumiya Iida
Primary affiliation: Bio-Inspired Robotics Lab, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Position: Professor
Web Site: http://www.birl.ethz.ch/
Room: Pátria
Date: Thursday 05 May, 16:00
Sustainable ICT: Micro and Nanoscale Energy Management
ICT energy isues form the basis of this session which brings together international experts interested in the realization of efficient low-power ICT devices. What are the basic mechanisms behind the heat production and how can we take advantage of the fluctuations instead of avoiding them? The aim is to understand the energy management physical mechanisms at nanoscale with a view to setting the bases for a new thermodynamics of ICT devices.
Speakers
- Leonardo Alfonsi, European Science Events Association, Austria
- Adrian Ionescu, Ecole Politechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland
- Fabio Marchesoni, Università di Camerino, Italy
- Bruno Michel, ETH Zurich / IBM Research, Switzerland
- Eric Pop, University Illinois & Beckman Inst, Urbana, USA
- Georgios Fagas, Tyndall Institute, Ireland
- Ralph Stübner, European Commission, ICT-FET Proactive
Session organiser: Luca Gammaitoni
Primary affiliation: NiPS Laboratory, Dipartimento di Fisica, Università di Perugia, Italy
Position: Director of Noise in Physical System Laboratory, University of Perugia
Web Site: http://www.nipslab.org
Room: Lehár
Date: Friday 06 May, 10:45
Pervasive Socio-Technical Fabric
Leading experts in their field outline the challenges to pervasive systems research as well as looking ahead to the next grand challenge: Pervasive Socio-Technical Fabric.
The session will also include a discussion on the Pervasive Adaptation Research Agenda Book which has been compiled by collecting about 100 research issues and challenges from not only outstanding European researchers, but also from the whole worldwide scientific community, as well as from industrial stakeholders.
The proposed networking session will take the form of a live debate, primed by short, 7 minute talks by four experts in the field who will each outline research challenges towards Socio-technical Pervasive Fabric from their own background.
Speakers
- Norbert Streitz, Smart Future Initiative, Germany
- Albert Schmidt, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany
- Nigel Davies, University of Arizona, USA and Lancaster University, UK
- Alois Ferscha, University of Linz, Dept. of pervasive computing, Austria
Session organiser: Alois Ferscha
Primary affiliation: University of Linz, Dept. of Pervasive Computing, Linz, Austria
Position: Professsor, Head of Department
Web Site: http://www.pervasive.jku.at
Room: Brahms
Date: Friday 06 May, 10:45
Vision Restoration and Vision Chip Technologies
Find out how bionic vision devices could help blind people to regain some of their sight. This session will look at how retinal implants, bionic glasses and the genetic modification of retinal cells to recreate light sensitivity can all help with vision restoration.
The session will also look at how vertically integrated vision chip technology is bringing about a revolution in the design of artificial vision systems.
The session is jointly chaired by Ákos Kusnyerik and Ákos Zarándy.
Speakers
Botond Roska, Fiedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research, Switzerland
Ákos Kusnyerik, Rózsakert Medical Center, Hungary
Angel Rodriguez-Vazquez, Instituto de Microelectronica de Sevilla - CNM-CSIC, Spain
Kristof Karacs, PPKE Információs Technológiai Kar, Hungary
Ákos Zarándy, MTA SZTAKI, Budapest, Hungary
Session organiser: Ákos Zarándy
Primary affiliation: MTA SZTAKI, Budapest, Hungary
Room: Liszt
Date: Friday 06 May, 10:45
Robots Interacting with Humans – Embodied Intelligence for Better Robots
Can robots move towards becoming a companion in everyday life? Experts in the field explore design and control ideas for a new generation of robots that can co-exist and co-operate with people and get much closer to the human manipulation and locomotion performance than today’s robots do.
Speakers
Speakers:
- Alin Albu-Schäffer, DLR – German Aerospace Center, Germany
- Dino Accoto, Campus Bio-Medico University, Roma, Italy
- Antonio Bicchi, University of Pisa, Italy
- Maria Chiara Carrozza, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Pisa, Italy
- Herman van der Kooij, Twente University, Enschede, The Netherlands
- Bram Vanderborght, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Session organiser: Alin Albu-Schäffer
Primary affiliation: DLR, German Aerospace Center, Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany
Position: Head of Department
Web Site: http://www.dlr.de
Room: Pátria
Date: Friday 06 May, 10:45