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July 23 Society For Chaos Theory In Psychology And Life Sciences Annual Conference (Virtual)

Summary:
I am currently President-Elect of the Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology and Life Sciences (SCTPLS), which means I am in charge of organizing their 30th annual conference. It was to be held this year at the University of Toronto, July 22-24, but it will be a Zoom virtual conference on those dates (first day a workshop). Anyway, the registration deadline is July 6, site to register societyforchaostheory.org/2020/conf . All are welcome.  I list the program for the 23-24 below, for your interest, with the times being those of Toronto, EDT.For this post I just showThursday, July 23:8:00 AM: Welcome, Introduction, and Instructions8:30-10:00 AMSession AMichael Susko, Mindspring.com, Pennsylvania, USA  "Ten pulses of evolution & the logarithmic nature of evolutionary time"Martin D. Pham,

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I am currently President-Elect of the Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology and Life Sciences (SCTPLS), which means I am in charge of organizing their 30th annual conference. It was to be held this year at the University of Toronto, July 22-24, but it will be a Zoom virtual conference on those dates (first day a workshop). Anyway, the registration deadline is July 6, site to register societyforchaostheory.org/2020/conf . All are welcome.  I list the program for the 23-24 below, for your interest, with the times being those of Toronto, EDT.

For this post I just show

Thursday, July 23:

8:00 AM: Welcome, Introduction, and Instructions

8:30-10:00 AM

Session A

Michael Susko, Mindspring.com, Pennsylvania, USA  "Ten pulses of evolution & the logarithmic nature of evolutionary time"

Martin D. Pham, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada "Towards nonlinear neural models of linguistic indicators in cognitive impairment with implications for Evental psychiatry"

Ken Ware, QLD, Australia "Gravities 100% reliable vertical constraint"

Session B

Bob Hodge, University of Western Sydney, Australia "Some implications of Anderson's ontological hierarchy: the case of semiotics"

Harold Hastings, Bard College of Simon's Rock, Massachusetts, USA "Empirical scaling and dynamics regines for GDP: challenges and opportunities"

J. Barkley Rosser, Jr., James Madison University, Virginia, USA "Complexity and knowledge"

10:30-12:00

Keynote Session

Simon A. Levin, Princeton University, USA "Collective motion, collective decision-making, and collective action"

12:30-2:00

Session A

Symposium

Najia Bao, Columbia University " How to lower the threshold of STEM long term memory"

Session B

Poster Session

Gentian Vyshka, University of Tirana, Albania 'Hell is made of snapshots: Disguised religious images inside an allegedly communist movie"

Sungchoon (Aviva) Sinclair, University of Utah, USA "A common pattern across different disciplines in theoretical physics, chemistry, biology, and plastic art: Using an archetype of universal non-verbal plastic patterns by Kang Woo-Hang from a qualitative perspective"

Aleksander Jakimoowicz, INEPLAN, Poland "Hyperchaos in financial markets."

Abdel Hannachi, Stockholm University, Sweden " Nonlinear time series modelling of the North Atlantic Oscillation"

Mikhail Zimin, 2554629 Ontario Ltd, Canada "Description of chaos with the help of stochastic probability density functions"

Vivian Rambihar, Rogers University, Oklahoma, USA "Chaos complexity Covid-19: 30 years teaching health professonals chaos and complexity"

Chad Danyluck, University of Colorado-Boulder, USA "Physiological synchrony during a pre-practice routine is associated with poor performance in a team of male volleyball athletes"

2:30-4:00

Session A

Mark Shelhamer,Johns Hopkins University, Maryland, USA "A complex systems approach to human and mission resilience for a mission to Mars"

Kevin Dooley, Arizona State University, USA "A CAS model of systemic corruption"

Stephen Guastello, Marqutte University, Wisconsin, USA "Autonomic synchronization, leadershipo emergence, drivers and empaths"

Session B

Bernard Ricca, St. John Fisher's College, New York, USA "On the meaning of 'phase' in collaborative research"

Matthijs Kooopmans, Mercy College, New York, USA "The distinction between seasonal and fractal patterns in long-range time series I: Concepts of fractal estimation"

Matthijs Koopmans, Mercy College, New York, USA "The ditinction between seasonal and fractal patterns in long-range time series II: Modeling responses to seasonal and fractal estimation"

4:30-6:00

Session A

Symposium

Jenny Magnes, Vassar College, New York, USA "Dynamics markers of C. elegand motion in three dimensions"

Tyler Hatch, Vassar College, New York, USA "Nonlinear time series analysis of C. elegans motion"

Session B

Allan Combs, IISC, California, USA "Tottering on the edge of chaos"

William Sulis, McMaster University, Canada "The continuum from temperament to mental illness: Clinical and dynamical perspectives"

David Kreindler, University of Toronto, Canada "Dynamic warping to analyze the similarity of mood sympton time series data"

6:00-8:00

Social Gathering

Barkley Rosser
I remember how loud it was. I was a young Economics undergraduate, and most professors didn’t really slam points home the way Dr. Rosser did. He would bang on the table and throw things around the classroom. Not for the faint of heart, but he definitely kept my attention and made me smile. It is hard to not smile around J. Barkley Rosser, especially when he gets going on economic theory. The passion comes through and encourages you to come along with it in a truly contagious way. After meeting him, it is as if you can just tell that anybody who knows that much and has that much to say deserves your attention.

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