[CART360] nexus by marc buchanan

Vincent Leclerc v at eskistudio.com
Fri Nov 27 14:50:00 EST 2009


I have both books. If anyone is interested in looking at them next week, let
me know.

Vincent

On Fri, Nov 27, 2009 at 2:32 PM, Morgan Sutherland <
morgan at morgansutherland.net> wrote:

> Another book that touches on small-world networks (written by the author of
> the original paper paper), though focuses on mathematical models of
> synchronizing oscillators (i.e. fireflies, your heart, circadian rhythm) is
> Sync: The Emerging Science of Spontaneous Order by Steven Strogatz:
>
>
> http://www.amazon.com/SYNC-Emerging-Science-Spontaneous-Order/dp/0786868449 <http://www.amazon.com/SYNC-Emerging-Science-Spontaneous-Order/dp/0786868449>
>
> The original paper can be found here: Collective dynamics of 'small-world'
> networks<http://tam.cornell.edu/tam/cms/manage/upload/SS_nature_smallworld.pdf>
>
> The study of biological timing mechanisms (as opposed to our mechanical
> timing, which is far more basic) is very interesting to me. I'm hoping that
> in the next forty years we can start working with timing abstractions in
> computers based on the biological models.
>
> M
>
> <http://www.amazon.com/SYNC-Emerging-Science-Spontaneous-Order/dp/0786868449>
> On Thu, Nov 26, 2009 at 11:52 PM, Vincent Leclerc <v at eskistudio.com>wrote:
>
>> Coincidence is the current focus of modish mathematical investigation.
>> Kicked off, according to Buchanan, by a 1998 paper published in *Nature*,
>> research on the nature of coincidence posits that deep-seated principles
>> order huge, seemingly inchoate assemblies of objects. According to these
>> conjectured principles, any member of a gigantic assembly of similar members
>> (say of six billion human beings) can connect with any other member in
>> astonishingly few steps. The idea seems ubiquitous, cropping up in food
>> chains, the cell, neural networks, disease propagation, or electrical power
>> grids--all arenas explored by Buchanan. This connection of objects in a set,
>> dubbed "small worlds," comes in two "flavors": egalitarian networks and
>> aristocratic networks, an example of the latter being the Internet. These
>> are very interesting concepts, but before diving in, readers will want to
>> know what they might get from Buchanan's presentation of various
>> mathematicians' papers. Intimating that a small-worlds perspective might
>> reveal the workings of economics as well as biology and ecology, Buchanan
>> points up the relevance of his investigation. *Gilbert Taylor*
>>
>>
>> http://www.amazon.ca/Nexus-Worlds-Groundbreaking-Theory-Networks/dp/0393324427
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>>
>
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-- 
Vincent Leclerc

Creative | Technical Director, ESKI Inc.
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Part-time Faculty, Design and Computation Arts
Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada
http://hybrid.concordia.ca/~cart360_vincent/

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