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Friday, September 14, 2012

Agenda Cultural @ FIX University Campus newsRus.com




PROGRAMACIÓN
>> CONCIERTOS, DIÁLOGOS Y MÚSICAS
>> DIÁLOGO CON LAS ARTES VISUALES
>> ENCUENTROS, DIÁLOGOS Y PEDAGOGÍA
CONCIERTOS, DIÁLOGOS Y MÚSICAS
Jueves 6 de septiembre, 7:00pm

PEREIRA: CONCIERTO INTERNACIONAL
“Little Joe Mclerran band”

Museo de Arte de Pereira, Teatro don Juan María Marulanda
Av. Las américas # 19 – 88, Pereira - Risaralda

Sábado 22 de Septiembre, 7:00pm

BUGA: CONCIERTO INAUGURAL
“Little Joe Mclerran band”

Teatro Municipal Ernesto Salcedo Ospina
Calle 6 Cra 10 esquina, Buga - Valle

Domingo 23 de Septiembre, 4:00pm

PALMIRA: CONCIERTO INTERNACIONAL
“Little Joe Mclerran band”

Centro Comercial Llano Grande
Palmira - Valle

Martes 25 de Septiembre, 7:00pm

CONCIERTO: “INAUGURAL”
“Little Joe Mclerran band”

Universidad Javeriana
Calle 18 # 118 - 250, Auditorio Pontificia Universidad Javeriana Cali, Alfonso Borrero Cabal.
Cali - Valle

Miércoles 26 de Septiembre, 7:00pm

CONCIERTO: "BLUES MADE IN COLOMBIA"
Presenta a: “The Blue Turtles” (Cali) y “Blues Boy Trio” (Medellín)

La Fundación Hispanoamericana de Santiago de Cali presenta uno de los momentos musicales más sentidos del CALI BLUES FESTIVAL 2012: “BLUES MADE IN COLOMBIA", encuentro musical que busca resaltar el trabajo, la exploración y la producción de bandas nacionales y locales de nuestro país. Músicos de Bogotá, Medellín y Cali presentarán todo su talento a través de producciones nacidas bajo el interés del diálogo cultural, la historia y los matices del Blues entre otros géneros musicales relacionados.

“BLUES MADE IN COLOMBIA”, porque así suena el Blues en nuestro país!

Fundación Hispanoamericana Santiago de Cali
Avenida 3AC Norte # 35N-55, Cali - Valle
Entrada libre - Cupo limitado

Jueves 27 de Septiembre, 7:00pm

CONCIERTO: "GALA INTERNACIONAL"
Shaun Booker, Sean Carney y Little Joe Mclerran band

Con el sello característico de los mejores intérpretes del Blues Afroamericano, la cantante Shaun Booker introduce la audiencia a los matices vocales propios del Blues y sus orígenes musicales. Todo esto con el excepcional acompañamiento del Maestro del Blues Sean Carney y Little Joe Mclerran Band.

Auditorio Centro Cultural Comfandi
Calle 8 # 6-23, Cali - Valle
Entrada Libre - Cupo Limitado

Viernes 28 de Septiembre, 7:00pm

CONCIERTO: "BLUES & OUR AFRICAN ROOTS"

"BLUES & OUR AFRICAN ROOTS" se presentará en el Centro Cultural Comfandi de forma gratuita y abierta al público el Viernes 28 de Septiembre a las 7:00pm. El concierto tendrá un fuerte componente musical local en contraste con los ritmos angloparlantes de los Estados Unidos.

  • Carlos Reyes & La Killer band (Bogota)
  • Shaun Booker, Sean Carney, Little Joe McLerran band (Estados Unidos)
  • Esteban Copete y su Kinteto Pacifico (Cali)
  • La Percumotora (Cali)

Centro Cultural Comfandi
Calle 8 # 6-23, Cali - Valle
Entrada Libre - Cupo Limitado

^^ Subir
DIÁLOGO CON LAS ARTES VISUALES
Jueves 6 de septiembre, 7:00pm

EXPOSICIÓN FOTOGRÁFICA: “UNDER DE ROCK” FOTOGRAFÍAS DE LEONARDO GÓMEZ

Inauguración - Exposición abierta del 6 de septiembre hasta el 12 de octubre de 2012.

Galería de arte Humberto Hernandez
Centro Cultural Colombo Americano Cali
Calle 13 Norte #8-45 Barrio Granada

Lunes a viernes de 8:00am a 12:00m y de 2:00pm a 8:00pm
Sábados 9:00am a 12:00m y de 2:00pm a 6:00pm

Entrada libre

“Under the Rock”, un homenaje invisible en la música, el ejercicio íntimo y personal de un individuo o grupo que encuentra satisfacción desmedida; su rendición a las ondas sonoras que genera su instrumento y la complicidad de la banda. Es la música que desvanece la ausencia del privilegio y materializa por instantes una fama que toca la divinidad. Es un viaje personal y espiritual que en la mayoría de las veces solo la música logra entender. Somos espectadores, solo eso.

Ver más >>

Jueves 13 y jueves 20 de septiembre, 4:00pm

Ciclo audivosuales
Museo La Tertulia, cinemateca “lo que nuestros músicos ven en el blues”

Músicos caleños presentan su película favorita en diálogo con el blues y otros géneros musicales de los Estados Unidos.

Museo La Tertulia
Avenida Colombia # 5-105 Oeste
Entrada libre

12 al 28 de septiembre (de lunes a viernes), 2:00pm a 6:00pm

Proyecciones y audiciones:
Video conciertos y presentaciones legendarias del blues

Área de proyección y lectura de la Biblioteca Abraham Lincoln
Centro Cultural Colombo Americano, Sede norte

Calle 13N #8-45 Barrio Granada
Entrada libre

Sábado 22 de septiembre, 4:30pm

Sesión Club de Dibujo Cali:
“Me and the devil blues” - sesión 41

"Mitos y leyendas de la música/pactos mágicos: el blues y otras músicas tradicionales” con una puesta en escena que relata la interpretación de la canción "Me and the devil blues" de robert johnson, quien fue un músico de blues con corta vida, debido a que falleció a la edad de 27 años. su vida y su música influyeron en algunos de los músicos de los años 50 y 60; Algunos de los elementos más iconográficos de este músico son llevados al diálogo a través del dibujo.

Lugar a dudas
Calle 15 N #8-41
Entrada libre

^^ Subir
ENCUENTROS, DIÁLOGOS Y PEDAGOGÍA
Viernes 21 de septiembreMiércoles 26 de septiembre
Pereira:
Colegio Mundo Nuevo
Vereda Mundo Nuevo - Risaralda
Cali:
Tecnocentro Cultural Somos Pacífico
Comuna 21

CONOCIENDO EL BLUES CON LITTLE JOE MCLERRAN BAND “THE RECIPE FOR AMERICAN ROOT SOUP”

Un recorrido didáctico por la historia del blues y sus orígenes.

Sábado 22 de septiembre, 2:30pm a 4:30pmMartes 25 de septiembre, 2:30pm a 4:30pm
Buga:
Teatro municipal de Buga Ernesto Salcedo Ospina
Cupo limitado - Previa inscripción gratuita
Tel: 227-7074
Cali:
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana de Cali, sala de música
Cupo limitado - Previa inscripción gratuita
Tel. 321-8200 Ext. 8865/506
dcconcha@javerianacali.edu.co

DIALOGOS Y MUESTRA DE TRABAJO MUSICAL CON “LITTLE JOE MCLERRAN BAND”

Espacio para músicos amateur e interesados en explorar la historia del blues, su interpretación de la mano del galardonado embajador del Blues norteamericano Little Joe Mclerran, quien hará un recorrido musical breve de su técnica y principales influencias.

Martes 25 de septiembre, 3:00pm a 6:00pmJueves 27 de septiembre
Cali:
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana de Cali, sala de expresión corporal
Cupo limitado - Previa inscripción gratuita
Tel. 321-8200 Ext. 8865/506
dcconcha@javerianacali.edu.co
Cali:
Tecnocentro Cultural Somos Pacífico
Comuna 21

TALLER: AFRIKA 1492 “BAILES CANTAOS – CANTOS BAILAOS”
Con la Maestra Angélica Nieto

A través de la práctica del movimiento y la respiración consciente (empleando técnicas propias de la danza ritual afro-contemporánea y danzas en círculo) y de la escucha y el reconocimiento de música (folclore pacífico - Blues) este taller propone la estimulación del potencial creativo y la capacidad de auto-conocimiento, indagando en la apertura de la voz y la melodía vocal en conjunto.

Jueves 27 de septiembre, 12:00m a 1:00pm

CHARLA ACERCA DE ESTUDIOS DE MUSICA EN LOS ESTADOS UNIDOS
A cargo de la oficina de Education USA

Biblioteca Abraham Lincoln, Centro Cultural Colombo Americano - Sede norte
Calle 13N # 8-45 Barrio Granada
Entrada libre - Cupo limitado

Jueves 27 de septiembre, 2:30pm a 4:30pm

BLUES MASTER CLASS: LA VOZ DEL BLUES CON SEAN CARNEY Y SHAUN BOOKER

Espacio para músicos profesionales y amateur, interesados en explorar los matices y estilos de interpretación vocal del blues. la historia de dos de sus más importantes representantes con dos estilos marcados por una larga tradición cultural afro-americana.

Universidad del Valle, Auditorio Carlos Restrepo - Edificio Tulio Ramírez (316)
Cupo limitado - Inscripción gratuita
Tel. 321-2317

Viernes 28 de septiembre, 2:30pm - 4:30pm

FORO: MUSICAS TRADICIONALES “CULTURA Y EMPRENDIMIENTO”

Los músicos norteamericanos Little Joe Mclerran, Sean Carney y Shaun Booker comparten con el sector musical local sus experiencias desde la producción musical, su participación en festivales y retos de la industria en la promoción de músicas tradicionales en los Estados Unidos.

Hotel Aristí de Cali, Café bar La Central

^^ Subir




Entre el 6 y 28 de septiembre Cali, Pereira, Buga y Palmira reciben el CALI BLUES FESTIVAL 2012: “Encuentro Internacional de Músicas y Diálogos con el Arte” gracias a la participación de empresas, instituciones culturales, gobiernos internacionales, nacionales y municipales. Un evento que reúne diferentes expresiones musicales, las cuales evocan la exploración de sus raíces a través de referentes contemporáneos en la escena musical nacional e internacional del Blues y sus géneros relacionados como el Jazz, Góspel, R&B, Rock&Roll entre otros.

Este encuentro cultural presenta a lo largo de cuatro semanas: exposiciones, talleres, conciertos, conversatorios, ciclos audiovisuales y audiciones que permitirá a la comunidad dialogar e intercambiar saberes musicales y culturales con el Blues.



Tras seis años continuos de promoción y apoyo a espacios de difusión del género Blues, el Centro Cultural Colombo Americano mantiene su compromiso de crear un diálogo permanente entre la cultura de los Estados Unidos y Colombia.

Por eso, con el apoyo de la Embajada de los Estados Unidos se presentará en Cali, Pereira, Buga y Palmira a “Little Joe McLerran Band”, quienes han sido embajadores musicales de los Estados Unidos en todo el mundo. Little Joe McLerran es un músico galardonado por la organización “The Blues Foundation”, organización que se encuentra asociada al CALI BLUES FESTIVAL desde sus inicios.


CALI BLUES FESTIVAL también trabaja actualmente con el Festival de Blues de Medellín y otras regiones del país para llevar esta iniciativa artística a dimensiones únicas en su tipo, compartiendo el talento nacional e internacional en todo el país y destacando el evento no solo como un espectáculo de muchos escenarios, sino como un espacio para la formación y educación.


Entre los principales aliados y socios del Festival se destacan el Ministerio de Cultura a través de su programa nacional de concertación, Embajada de los Estados Unidos, Centro Cultural Comfandi, Fundación Hispanoamericana, las Secretarias de Cultura de Buga y Cali, Cámara de Comercio de Buga, Corporación Otro Cuento entre otros importantes aliados que apoyan la cultura y las artes en el país.


calicultural.net
ESPECTÁCULO: “Salsa, circo y orquesta” 8 p.m. a 2 a.m. Carpa Delirio.
267 × 400 - 33 k - jpg

elcorreo.ca
El esperado y tradicional Festival Hispanic Fiesta estará celebrando sus 31 ...
600 × 300 - 264 k - jpg

festivalpetronioalvare...
El antropólogo caleño Germán Patiño, fue el Director Cultural de Cali, ...
281 × 300 - 58 k - png

noticias.lainformacion...
El festival de teatro dFERIA 2012, que se celebrará desde el próximo lunes ...
645 × 483 - 45 k - jpg

noticias.lainformacion...
Foto de Michal Nyman y el Festival Salsa & Latin Jazz, platos fuertes de la
645 × 428 - 29 k - jpg

eluniversal.com.co
Pioneros del Ritmo, triples campeones de la salsa, grupo de Cali.
510 × 296 - 77 k - jpg

noticias.lainformacion...
... conciertos dentro de una gira mundial que celebra sus 50 años de vida, ...
642 × 429 - 32 k - jpg

mundialdesalsa.com
Festival Mundial De Salsa Cali 2012
104 × 104 - 11 k - jpg

mundialdesalsa.com
Festival Mundial De Salsa Cali 2012
104 × 104 - 24 k - png

mundialdesalsa.com
Festival Mundial De Salsa Cali 2012
104 × 104 - 7 k - jpg

mostwanted-online.nl
DVD various - Festival Mundial de Salsa - Cali 2006. Click to enlarge
510 × 725 - 64 k - jpg

ccc.org.co
En el marco del Festival Mundial de la Salsa que se llevó a cabo en Cali el ...
300 × 213 - 16 k - jpg

desdeabajo.info
... lo demás es loma” o “Cali, capital mundial de la Salsa”, ...
413 × 310 - 28 k - jpg

fotos.lainformacion.com
28/07/2012 00:04. Las representaciones correrán a cargo de La Academia del ...
645 × 417 - 54 k - jpg

mundialdesalsa.com
Festival Mundial De Salsa Cali 2012
104 × 104 - 8 k - jpg

facebook.com
Mi Cali Bella VII FESTIVAL MUNDIAL DE SALSA CALI 2012 Con Toda Balcon de los ...
50 × 50 - 3 k - jpg

salsamagistral.blogspo...
Fusión Salsa Magistral presenta SALSA LOVE celebrando el día del amor y de ...
945 × 1390 - 721 k - jpg

visitapuertovallarta.c...
Un éxito el Primer Festival de Salsa y Mambo en Puerto Vallarta
640 × 425 - 72 k - jpg

publimetro.cl
Inti Illimani Histórico lanza su Tour Mundial para celebrar sus 45 años
567 × 291 - 37 k - jpeg

bestday.com.mx
... típicos como la esperada Feria de Cali y el Festival Mundial de Salsa.
240 × 140 - 26 k - jpg

More FIX on the NET @ FIX University Cultural Campus

Welcome to Spring Semester 2013

Fernando IX University
Locations of visitors to this page




Missing Image
            WHAT 
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          SCIENCE 
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       UNDERLIES 
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          THESE 
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          COMPANIES? 


  • What science underlies these companies?
  • How might a social network influence election outcomes?
  • What are the economics of email spam?
  • Why do some social networking services take off, and others die?
  • What do game theory and the Paris subway have to do with Internet routing?
  • What structural properties might we expect any social network to have?
  • How does Google find what you're looking for...
  • ...and exactly how do they make money doing so?
  • Why do some people spend their time anonymously correcting punctuation on
    Wikipedia, without compensation or recognition?
  • How does your position in an economic network (dis)advantage you?
  • How are individual and collective behavior related in complex networks?

    Networked Life looks at how our world is
    connected -- socially, strategically and technologically -- and why it matters.

    (Jump to the course schedule. )



    CIS 112
    NETWORKED LIFE
    Spring
    2010
    Tuesdays and Thursdays 12-1:30 PM, Levine Hall
    101
    Prof. Michael Kearns



    Brief Notes on Curriculum Requirements Fulfilled by CIS 112:

  • Networked Life is one of the courses
    satisfying the College of Arts and Sciences'
    Quantitative
    Data Analysis Requirement.
  • Networked Life is counted as an official
    Engineering Elective course in SEAS. In past years some upperclass SEAS students
    have succesfully petitioned to have the course counted for non-100 level credit;
    please see Prof Kearns if you are interested in this option.
  • Networked Life is cross listed as a course
    in the
    Philosophy, Politics
    and Economics (PPE)
    major.
  • Networked Life is approved as an elective
    course in the
    Science,
    Technology and Society (STSC)
    major.



    COURSE DESCRIPTION

    Networked Life

    looks at how our world is connected --
    socially, economically, strategically and technologically -- and why it matters.

    The answers to the questions at the top of this page are related. They have
    been the subject of a fascinating intersection of disciplines including computer
    science, physics, psychology, sociology, mathematics, economics and finance.
    Researchers from these areas all strive to quantify and explain the growing
    complexity and connectivity of the world around us, and they have begun to
    develop a rich new science along the way.

    Networked Life will explore recent scientific
    efforts to explain social, economic and technological structures -- and the way
    these structures interact -- on many different scales, from the behavior of
    individuals or small groups to that of complex networks such as the Internet and
    the global economy.

    This course covers computer science topics and other material that is
    mathematical, but all material will be presented in a way that is accessible to
    an educated audience with or without a strong technical background. The course is open to all majors and all levels, and is taught
    accordingly. There will be ample opportunities for those of a
    quantitative bent to dig deeper into the topics we examine. The majority of the
    course is grounded in scientific and mathematical findings of the past two
    decades or less (often much less).

    Spring 2010 is the seventh offering of Networked Life.
    You can get a detailed sense for the course by visiting the
    extensive course web pages from
    Spring
    2009,
    Spring
    2008,
    Spring
    2007,
    Spring
    2006,
    Spring
    2005,
    and Spring
    2004.
    This year the course will cover many of the same topics, updated in
    light of new research since the 2007 offering. As has become standard in the
    course, we plan to include communal experiments in distributed human
    decision-making on networks.



    REQUIRED TEXTS

    The following four books, available at the Penn Book Store, are required
    texts for the course:

  • The Tipping Point, by
    Malcolm Gladwell. Paperback. Little Brown & Company, 2000.
  • Connected, by Nicholas A. Christakis and James H. Fowler. Hardback. Little Brown &
    Company, 2009.
  • Six
    Degrees: The Science of a Connected Age,
    by Duncan J. Watts. Paperback. W.W.
    Norton, 2003.
  • Micromotives
    and Macrobehavior,
    by Thomas C. Schelling. Paperback. W.W. Norton, 1978.

    In addition to readings from these texts, there will be frequent articles
    from the recent scientific and popular literature that will be provided directly
    on this web page at the appropriate points in the syllabus.



    INSTRUCTOR

    Prof. Michael Kearns
    mkearns@cis.upenn.edu
    Levine Hall
    509
    Office hours: This term I will hold "on demand" office hours. If you
    would like to meet, please send me email with your availability. If you are the
    first one to request a meeting, I will choose a mutually convenient time
    (usually but not always on either Tue or Thu). If I've already arranged a time
    with someone else I will try to schedule you immediately before or after.



    COURSE PERSONNEL

    Kareem Amin, teaching assistant
    akareem@seas.upenn.edu
    Office
    hours: Fridays, 1:30 - 3:00

    Mickey Brautbar, teaching assistant
    brautbar@seas.upenn.edu
    Office
    hours: Tuesdays, 1:30 - 3:00

    Office hours for both TAs will be held in the lounge area on the 5th floor of
    Levine Hall. Take the elevators up to 5, go down the ramp and take a right at
    the bottom; the lounge area is halfway down the hall on your left.



    COURSE LOCATIONS AND TIMES

    Attendance at the main lectures is considered mandatory for enrolled
    students. They are held Tuesdays and Thursdays 12-1:30, Levine Hall 101.



    COURSE PREREQUISITES

    Networked Life has no formal prerequisites,
    and is meant to be accessible to a broad range of students across SEAS, the
    College, and Wharton. No computer programming background is required, but
    students should be comfortable using computers and the Web, and accessing
    resources on the Internet.

    The course is open to all majors and all levels.



    COURSE FORMAT AND REQUIREMENTS

    The main lectures for Networked Life will be
    in fairly traditional format, including class participation and discussion.
    Slides for all lectures will be provided, usually at least slightly in advance
    of the lecture itself.

    There may also be participatory social experiments and exercises.

    There will be a number of homework and research assignments. These will
    include a fair amount of basic quantitative analysis of data, as well as essay
    questions, computer and web exercises, and other quantitative exercises.
    Collaboration on the homeworks is not permitted.

    There will be a midterm, and a final exam.

    It is anticipated that the participatory experiments, homeworks, midterm and
    final will each count for approximately a quarter to a third of the overall
    grade.

    Students are encouraged to bring articles, demos, web pages, news events,
    etc. that are relevant to course topics to the attention of Prof. Kearns. Extra
    credit will be given if the suggested material is used in the course.



    INFORMATION ON ACCESS TO SEAS COMPUTING FACILITIES

    All students must have reliable access to web and
    Internet resources, as well as be reachable via email in a timely fashion. For
    these purposes, any student in the course may obtain an account on the server
    Eniac if they so desire, if they do not already have one.
    Sign up for an Eniac account here.

    All students enrolled in CSE 112 have access to the School of Engineering and
    Applied Sciences computer labs. We will test all the software that you are
    required to use on Windows computers using Internet Explorer. This software is
    generally written in Java and may work on other platforms, but we cannot
    guarantee it.

    PC Labs can be found in:
    Towne M62 Towne M70 Towne 142 Towne 143
    Towne 144
    More information
    on the labs is online.

    You will need to print and turn in materials, and you may not be able to your
    all your printing in the SEAS labs. For a fee, you can print longer documents at
    the SEAS library on the 2nd floor of Towne. Of course, you can also print on
    your own printer or elsewhere where you have access to a printer.



    DETAILED COURSE SCHEDULE

    Except for occasional hard-copy handouts distributed in lectures, all of the
    material for the course will be posted in the table below, which will be
    gradually filled in as we progress through the students. Lecture slides, reading
    and homework assignments, in-class and out-of-class experiments, due dates, exam
    information, etc. will all be provided below. It is every
    student's responsibility to monitor this schedule closely and regularly.

    In the assigned readings below, "C+F", "Gladwell", "Watts" and "Schelling"
    refer to the four required texts cited above. Other readings will be directly
    provided as links to PDF documents. Unless specified otherwise, you should
    generally try to complete the assigned reading during roughly the period spanned
    by the dates given in the same row of the table.

    The lecture slides are all in PowerPoint format, but they may often contain
    links to documents in other formats, including PDF, Postscript, JPEG, etc. In
    order to view all of the linked content you may need to be using a computer with
    viewers installed for these formats.

    In the "DATES" column of the table below, our current place in the schedule
    will be highlighted in red.

    "THE FOURTH COLUMN" will be used to put links to class-related materials from
    the popular media, the web, etc. Extra credit will be provided to those who send
    me such material if it is used.

    .
    DATES SLIDES ASSIGNMENTS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS THE FOURTH COLUMN
    Lecture:
    Th Jan 14
    Course Introduction and Overview
    (Rev. 1/14)

    Within the first week of class, you should read Malcolm Gladwell's "The
    Tipping Point" in its entirety. While we will not spend a lot of time in
    lectures directly on the book, it remains a highly readable introduction to some
    central course themes. If you want to get a jump start, begin reading
    "Connected" by C+F immediately afterwards.

    Here is a document containing a brief
    background survey and our first communal social experiment.
    Please print
    them out, complete them (which should only take a few minutes), and return them
    at the start of the second lecture (Tu Jan 19), as we will analyze the results
    of the social experiment on the fly in class.

    Be the first Field Agent of the term!

    Lectures:
    Tu Jan 19
    Th Jan 21
    Tu Jan 26
    Contagion, Tipping and Navigation in Networks
    (Rev. 1/28)

    These lectures are the ones most closely tied to "The Tipping Point". We'll
    also discuss the following two articles:

    ``An Experimental Study of the Small World
    Problem'',
    by J. Travers and S. Milgram.

    ``An Experimental Study of Search in Global Social
    Networks'',
    by P. Dodds, R. Muhamad, and D. Watts.

    You don't need to read these articles in great detail, but at least up to the
    resolution we discuss them in class.

    Update 1/25: I have been told by the Penn Bookstore that "Connected" should
    now be in stock on the shelves; please let me know if you don't find it there.

    And we have winners! First-to-Field-Agent honors go to Thomas Abel for
    pointing out this
    Penn lecture by
    Tipping Point author Malcolm Gladwell
    on January 28; to Zac Costlow for this
    article on the use of
    social
    networks for information about Haiti;
    and to Stephen Guss for this NYT
    article on
    technology-induced
    generation gaps.
    I somehow find this last one especially disturbing. Keep
    'em coming.

    IMHO, this example of
    contagious behavior
    by newly minted Field Agent Thomas Boutin takes the
    all-time NWLife prize for most entertaining Fourth Column submission. Plus it so
    nicely illustrates certain course themes: the importance of both individual
    behavior and collective dynamics in group formation; the rate of adoption of new
    technologies and activities; tipping and cascades; etc. Not to mention the
    patience and foresight of the videographer --- you'd have thought 30 seconds of
    this would have been plenty, but no. Finally, keep your eye on the woman in
    yellow apparently applying sunscreen for most of the time. Priceless stuff all
    around.

    From F.A. Louis Bergelson, the Wikipedia
    game.

    To his already distinguished career as a Benchmark Capital
    founder,
    CEO of the startup Kaching, and chair of the SEAS Board of Overseers, Andy Rachleff adds what may be his highest honor yet: NWLife Field Agent. He
    checks in from out West with the very cool
    We Feel Fine project.

    Not sure what's in the air out in Silicon Valley these days, but everyone's
    checking into the Fourth Column. From
    seasoned-technology-exec-and-now-Field-Agent
    Danny Shader comes
    this fascinating article on
    slime
    mold growing the Tokyo subway
    (and yes, that's actually just "growing", not
    "growing in"). For the interested, here is the
    source article.

    I've posted these in years past but they are worth checking out if you've not
    seen them before:
    Facebook
    Friends Wheel
    (courtesy of F.A. Zachary Wasserman) and TouchGraph's Google, Amazon, and Facebook browsers
    (courtesy of F.A. Kunal Kandimalla).

    From our first Repeat Offender Stephen Guss, a NYT piece on Google
    search completion winners,
    whose logical conclusion is "vanity search
    completion", first brought to my attention by the inimitable
    Chris Dixon.

    Lectures:
    Th Jan 28
    Tu Feb 2
    Th Feb 4
    Universal Network Structure and Generative Models
    (Rev. 2/4)

    For these lectures, you should read Chapters 2, 3 and 4 in Watts. (I
    recommend simply reading the book in its entirety, but will not require it.)

    You should be reading "Connected" in parallel; much of it is related to
    ongoing course topics, and I would estimate that we'll discuss it in more detail
    in a couple of weeks or so.

    We have a slew of new Field Agents today. From James Katz, the White
    House visitor network.
    From Brynn Shepherd, weak ties and "consequential
    strangers".
    From Tony Zheng, the Pope
    pushes Facebook.
    From Aurelien Meunier, the PoliticoSphere. From Rebecca Sussman,
    the
    Sotu Spinner.

    And from F.A. Hillary Reinsberg, Internet Famous at Parsons, the first
    "algorithmically graded class" (not so sure about that claim). Of course, as we
    shall eventually discuss, the real key to a good grade here is probably a
    first-rate
    SEO and SEM campaign.

    From R.O. and FoNWL (Friend of Networked Life) Kim Kearns, an NPR story on peer-produced
    pricing pressure in China
    (a.k.a. "tuangou"), another modern example of
    disintermediation.

    Lectures:
    Tu Feb 9
    Th Feb 11 (snowed out)
    Tu Feb
    16
    Th Feb 18
    Long Tails and Navigation
    (Rev.
    2/18)

    Here is Homework 1 (revised 2/12, fixed
    bugs in Problems 1 and 5), due at the start of class Tuesday Feb 23 in
    hardcopy form.

    The TA office hours have moved location to the 5th floor lounge area of
    Levine Hall; see directions above.

    Professor Kearns will hold office hours on Monday, February 15 at 4PM in 509
    Levine.

    The following three articles will be mentioned during these lectures; you do
    not have to read them in detail but should be familiar with their main findings
    as discussed in lecture.

    The
    Scaling Laws of Human Travel,
    Brockmann, Hufnagel, Geisel.

    Navigation in a Small World, Kleinberg.

    Identity and Search in Social Networks, Watts,
    Dodds, Newman.

    TA Mickey Brautbar's office hours have been moved half an hour earlier, to
    Tuesdays at 1:30.

    The midterm examination will be held in class on Thursday March 4.

    I will provide extra credit to anyone who attends a lecture in the ongoing Market and Social
    Systems Engineering
    series, and submits a brief (about one page) write-up
    about it. Send them to Prof Kearns as attachments via email with the subject
    like "MKSE lecture write-up". You can do as many of them as you like.

    Like the snow, our Special Forces are piling up faster than I can shovel.
    From F.A. Shawn Chen,
    Web 2.0 suicide. How do I politely suggest this to some of my FB friends? And Shawn
    immediately earns promotion to R.O. with
    the
    spam that is social.
    From R.O. Tony Zheng, the
    many dangers of social media.
    From F.A. Troy Shu, All Your Meme Are Belong to Us. From F.A.
    Spencer Lance Hopkins
    darkened
    Twitter avatars down under.
    R.O. Zachary Wasserman is back with the Human
    Diseasome.
    F.A. Jay Fiddelman debuts with an extensive
    Economist report on social networking.
    From F.A. Rodrigo Abreu, yet
    another structural measure of importance.
    From F.A. Shubhi Nigam, Internet
    Nominated for Nobel Prize.
    The article has enough typos to make me
    suspicious but I support the nomination only so that in its acceptance speech,
    Internet can thank Al Gore for inventing it.

    Today's Entertainment Award goes to F.A. Sam Pasternak, who channels Honorary
    R.O. Stephen Colbert in
    the
    last Word on social networking
    and blippy.com

    A number of you noted the introduction of Google Buzz, the latest purported
    Facebook-Twitter-Etc destroyer, but whose features and functionality were
    supplanted in the news by the
    buzzkill
    over privacy snafus.
    You'd think they'd have thought this through a little
    more carefully out there in Mountain View. I haven't tried it yet, but it does
    bring to mind a funny story about my gmail account and Pizza Hut...

    I ran into now-F.A. Anyu Dai at a Philadelphia Orchestra concert on Saturday,
    and later she wrote about the tipping phenomenon of standing ovations at such
    events, as well as my own insect-like participation. It got me thinking that
    this is such a natural problem it must have been studied before, and indeed it
    has. As always, there's nothing new under the sun.

    From F.A. Peng Fei Chen, use twiangulation to
    understand your cwustewing cwoefficient. From F.A. Allison Mishkin, a domestic
    version of the aforementioned concept of "tuangou" at
    GroupOn. From F.A. Alice Lee, a
    cool network visualization of
    time
    travel in the movies.

    Lecture:
    Tu Feb 23
    The Web as Network: A Case Study
    (Rev. 2/25)

    Related articles:

    Graph Structure in the Web, Broder et al.

    Web Structure in 2005, Hirate, Kato, Yamana.

    Extra credit opp: for attending and submitting a brief write-up of this talk by
    Internet pioneers Kahn and Cerf,
    winners of the 2010 Pender Award.

    .

    Lecture:
    Th Feb 25
    Network Structure and Web Search
    (Rev. 2/25)

    Everyone should read this excellent
    article on Google's search algorithm
    from the current issue of Wired. (Note
    that it is three pages long.) It emphasizes the point that PageRank --- one of
    the main topics of this lecture --- is now but one small piece or "signal" in
    the overall algorithm. Thanks to several unnamed F.A.s for pointing it out.

    The following two articles are directly related to the lecture material, but
    are not required; they are just posted for the curious and/or mathematically
    inclined.

    Authoritative
    Sources in a Hyperlinked Environment,
    J. Kleinberg.

    The PageRank Citation Ranking: Bringing Order to the
    Web,
    L. Page, S. Brin, R. Motwani, T. Winograd.

    A bit of Fourth Column catch-up. From R.O. Thomas Abel, the latest social web
    entry,
    Strings. From F.A. Amanda
    Smith,
    contagion via
    touching.
    And from F.A.s Andrew Lum, Jonathan Schwartz and Yash Mittal, chatroulette and its 17-year-old
    founder in Moscow.
    From R.O. Brynn Shepherd, Steve
    Strogatz on negative connectivity.
    From R.O. Rodrigo Abreu, Please Rob Me.

    Lecture:
    Tu Mar 2
    "Connected" At Last
    (Rev. 3/2)

    March 2: Here are solutions and grading
    guidelines for Homework 1,
    written by Kareem and Mickey.

    In this lecture we will (finally) go over some of the themes explored in the
    book "Connected". In service of this goal, here are links to the Christakis and
    Fowler papers on
    happiness, loneliness, obesity, and smoking. We will mainly discuss the yellow highlighted
    portions of each.

    Lecture:
    Th Mar 4
    MIDTERM EXAMINATION

    The midterm will cover material for the entire course so far, all the way
    through the March 2 lecture. The exam is closed books --- no books, notes,
    devices, etc. are permitted.

    In preparation for the midterm, Prof Kearns will hold a Q&A session on
    Tuesday March 2 at 3 PM in Berger Auditorium of Skirkanich Hall.
    Skirkanich Hall is the building across the courtyard behind Levine Hall,
    and Berger Auditorium is on the basement level. Please come prepared with your
    questions about course material.

    To help you study for the midterm, here are midterms with solutions from 2009, 2008, 2007, and 2006. Please be aware that the material covered in class
    has varied slightly from year to year, so there are questions on these exams
    which I wouldn't expect you to be able to easily answer. (And a good test of
    your understanding of class material is that you'll immediately recognize such
    questions.) There are also some missing figures.

    .

    Lecture:
    Tu Mar 16
    Incentives and Collective Behavior
    (Rev.
    3/15)

    Read Schelling, "Micromotives and Macrobehavior", Chapters 1, 3 and 4.

    From Yours Truly, another hilarious Colbert
    segment,
    this time on the start-up Kwedit. (Full disclosure: I am an advisor to them.) From F.A. Yiyi Zhou, the twitter grader. From F.A. Scott Thorn,
    the
    South
    Korean sausage epidemic.
    From F.A. Jay Paik, Facebook
    diplomacy.
    From R.O. Rodrigo Abreu, more
    network inspiration from Mother Nature.
    From F.A. Ran Wei, Internet
    vigilantes in China.

    Lecture:
    Th Mar 18
    Introduction to Game Theory and Strategic Behavior
    (Rev. 3/18)

    .

    .

    Lecture:
    Tu Mar 23
    Th Mar 25
    Tu Mar 30
    Behavioral Experiments in Network Science
    (Rev.
    4/1)

    There are three assigned readings associated with these lectures:

    An
    Experimental Study of the Coloring Problem on Human Subject Networks,
    MK, S.
    Suri, N. Montfort.

    Behavioral
    Experiments on Biased Voting in Networks,
    MK, S. Judd, J. Tan, J. Wortman.

    Behavioral
    Conflict and Fairness in Social Networks.
    S. Judd, MK, Y. Vorobeychik.

    Midterms will be returned in class March 23, and available afterwards from
    Cheryl Hickey in Levine 502; here is the
    solution
    set.
    The average score on the midterm was 70, with a standard deviation of
    15.

    Lots of great Fourth Column material lately, thanks to all and keep it
    coming! From F.A. Peng Fei Chen, the
    Twitter Predictor Game from Hunch, which I will describe and demo in
    class. From F.A. Jason Gui, a cool location-based media sharing iPhone app named
    LoKast, which Jason helped to launch. From R.O. Zachary Wasserman, In Praise of
    Obscurity.
    A double-header from R.O. Shawn Chen: the
    latest from our friends C+F.
    and online
    status anxiety.
    From F.A. Scott Biddle, network
    science for Brazilian hookers.
    From F.A. Yiyi Zhou, the Chatroulette Map.

    Lecture:
    Th Apr 1
    Tu Apr 6
    Th Apr 8
    Tu Apr 13
    Trading in Networks
    (Rev. 4/13)
    Save the Date! It looks like we are planning the first of two or possibly
    three sessions of behavioral experiments in network formation games for the
    evening of Friday April 23. Details about signing up as a
    participant will be coming shortly.

    Here is Homework 2, due as hardcopy at
    the start of class on Tuesday, April 27.

    Breaking news from R.O. Jay Fiddelman: a Slate article surveying doubts about contagion
    research.
    Haven't read it yet, but looks highly relevant. From R.O. Ann Dai, data
    artist Stefanie Posavec.
    From F.A. Noah Fox, Twitter box-office and sleeping predictions. Here is a related
    article.
    From F.A. Dan Markowitz fiverr.com, a kind of Five Below of online
    labor markets.

    At long last, a revenue model for Twitter: monetization via Promoted Tweets.

    Lecture:
    Th Apr 15
    Tu Apr 20
    Strategic Models of Network Formation
    (Rev. 4/15)

    .

    .

    Lecture:
    Tu Apr 20
    Behavioral Experiments on a Network Formation
    Game

    (Rev. 4/22)

    The first session of behavioral experiments in network formation games will
    be held Friday, April 23. We are also planning sessions
    on Thursday, April 29 and Monday, May 3.
    Calls for participants in the second two sessions will be sent out via
    email 4/21.

    UPDATED 4/21: It is now a course
    requirement counting towards your final grade that you participate in the
    experiments in one of two ways. If you participate as a subject in one of the
    sessions, that will fulfill your experimental requirement. If you do not
    participate as a subject, you will instead write an essay in which you will be
    asked to speculate and predict about various aspects of the experiments; details
    will be forthcoming.

    In the 4/20 lecture I will describe the basic set-up of the experiments, the
    payoffs or incentives, and the GUI. This information will be repeated at each
    session itself, and is necessary background for both the experiments and essays.

    Today at 3 PM there will be a talk by Prof. Ed Lazowska of the University of
    Washington on
    the future of
    computer science,
    which I suspect will be excellent and touch on some course
    themes; extra credit for attending and writing up a brief report as usual.

    Lecture:
    Th Apr 22
    Tu Apr 27
    Internet Economics
    (Rev. 4/22)

    Update 4/27: By now (4/27) we have sent email to
    everyone selected as a regular participant for the final two experimental
    sessions on 4/29 and 5/3. If you did not receive such an
    email, you must instead complete a short essay assignment, which is described
    here. It is due May 11.
    See the assignment for details.

    Homework 2 is due in class today (4/27).

    Please complete an online evaluation for the course! Your feedback is taken
    seriously and influences the evolution of the course.

    One last round of Fourth Column; thanks to all of you who contributed this
    semester, even if I didn't post them all.

    From R.O. Alison Mishkin, the Radiohead
    approach to wine bars.
    From R.O. Zac Costlow, Twitter stupid fight. From R.O.
    Hillary Reinsberg, the
    electricfoxy facebook
    ping test
    (bonus: guess the Sixties reference). From F.A. Daniel Baume, browser
    blackmail.
    (Why didn't I think of this?) From R.O. Shawn Chen, more uses
    of Where's George.
    From F.A. Andrew Braunstein, the marketing
    genius of the Grateful Dead.

    And finally, we come full circle: from R.O. Zachary Wasserman, a TED
    analysis of the Sasquatch dance.

    MAY 11 FINAL EXAM The final exam will be held Tuesday, May 11, 9-11 AM, in
    Meyerson Hall B1. It will be cumulative of the entire course. We will
    hold some extra office hours and a review session before the exam.

    UPDATE 5/3: We intend to get your HW2s graded and back
    to you in time to help you prepare for the final; details as they emerge.
    Second, a reminder that the final is *cumulative* --- everything from the entire
    course is fair game. There will be perhaps slightly greater emphasis on material
    since the midterm, but not significantly so.

    I will hold a review session on Friday, May 7 at noon in
    Berger Auditorium in Skirkanich Hall. Skirkanich is the building across
    the courtyard right next to our usual auditorium; Berger is in the basement
    there. As with the midterm review, I will largely let the review be driven by
    questions from the audience, with perhaps some chronological structuring. I will
    go for a couple of hours or until your questions are exhausted, whichever comes
    first.

    TAs Mickey and Kareem will also hold extra office hours this week; note that
    these *differ* from their usual office hours in order for us to get some good
    coverage across the week.

    TA office hours this week:

    Tuesday 1:30-3pm (Mickey)
    Wednesday 1:30-3pm (Kareem)
    Thursday
    1:30-3pm (Kareem)
    Friday 2:30-4pm (Mickey)

    All OHs will be held at their usual spot for the respective TA.

    UPDATE 5/7: Here are Homework 2 solutions. The average score was
    82, and the standard deviation 13. As usual, see the TA who graded a particular
    problem for grading inquiries.

    UPDATE 5/9: Here is a sample final with solutions from 2007.

    Enjoy your summer!



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