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  <event:Event rdf:about="http://ebiquity.umbc.edu/event/html/id/185/The-Science-of-Interaction-A-New-NSF-Initiative">
    <rdfs:label><![CDATA[The Science of Interaction: A New NSF Initiative]]></rdfs:label>
    <event:title><![CDATA[The Science of Interaction: A New NSF Initiative]]></event:title>
    <event:speaker><person:Collaborator rdf:about="http://ebiquity.umbc.edu/person/html/Sirin/Tekinay/"><person:name><![CDATA[Sirin  Tekinay]]></person:name><rdfs:label><![CDATA[Sirin  Tekinay]]></rdfs:label></person:Collaborator></event:speaker>
    <event:startDate rdf:datatype="&xsd;dateTime">2006-11-07T14:00:00-05:00</event:startDate>
    <event:endDate rdf:datatype="&xsd;dateTime">2006-11-07T15:00:00-05:00</event:endDate>
    <event:location><![CDATA[325b ITE]]></event:location>
    <event:abstract><![CDATA[The Science of Interaction initiative aims to establish, explore and
exploit the role of communications and computing in all other sciences
and engineering.  It is envisioned as a basic, trans-disciplinary
field, comprised of elements of mathematical, physical, social,
biological, earth and computing sciences, with applications in every
engineering discipline. As we continue to populate the Earth and space
with complex, heterogeneous, interconnected, interdependent manmade
systems, such as transportation, communication, distribution (food,
supply, power) and sensor networks, we observe that the dynamics of
these systems increasingly resemble natures own physical, chemical,
cellular, social, atmospheric, fluid interactions. 

<p>
The Science of
Interaction promises to unlock and utilize natures means, from
sub-particle to galactic scales, in storing, using, and conveying
information, and controlling systems. It seeks to harness natures
signals, codes and communications, feedback and control systems, in
order to advance manmade systems for intelligence, health, education,
prosperity, and security of individuals and societies. Two unifying
themes underlie all projects in the Science of Interaction:
<ul>
<li> Exploring and modeling natures interactions, connections, complex
relations, and interdependencies, scaling from sub-particles to
galactic, from cellular to societal, in microns to light years, in
order to understand them, mimic them, synthesize them, and exploit
them (examples include theory of networked computing, metabolic and
gene expression networks, control systems, organizational behavior,
social and economic networks)</li>

<li> Coupling of the physical world with the cyber world, integrating
natural sciences with social, and computing sciences and engineering
(examples include logistical systems, supply chains, power networks,
signal sensing and processing, bioinformatics, human-computer
interaction, communications systems, cognitive sciences, disease
outbreak models)</ul>
</ul>

These themes call for projects at the interface of natural sciences,
social sciences, computing, and engineering. This talk will overview
and discuss this new initiative, and seek to get audience input for
exemplary applications.
]]></event:abstract>
    <event:tag><![CDATA[networking]]></event:tag>
    <event:tag><![CDATA[social media]]></event:tag>
    <event:tag><![CDATA[blog]]></event:tag>
    <event:host><person:Collaborator rdf:about="http://ebiquity.umbc.edu/person/html/Tulay/Adali/"><person:name><![CDATA[Tulay  Adali]]></person:name><rdfs:label><![CDATA[Tulay  Adali]]></rdfs:label></person:Collaborator></event:host>
  </event:Event>

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