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Complexity and the Structure of Music: Universal Features and Evolutionary Perspectives Across Cultures - Speakers

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Complexity and the Structure of Music: Universal Features and Evolutionary Perspectives Across Cultures
December 7 - 9, 2020 — Zoom

Marco Buongiorno Nardelli


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University of North Texas - USA

Bio: Marco Buongiorno Nardelli is University Distinguished Research Professor at the University of North Texas: composer, flutist, computational materials physicist, and a member of CEMI, the Center for Experimental Music and Intermedia, and iARTA, the Initiative for Advanced Research in Technology and the Arts. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society and of the Institute of Physics, an Associate Fellow of IMéRA, the Institute for Advanced Studies of Aix-Marseille University, and a Parma Recordings artist.

Miguel Fuentes


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Santa Fe Institute - USA

Bio: Miguel Fuentes seeks to understand the behavior of Complex Systems from a fundamental-conceptual point of view, focusing on anomalies that are often important ingredients for the emergence of new emerging characteristics. He works in interdisciplinary research, from mathematical physics, with a focus on statistical mechanics, nonlinear dynamics and the use of information theory and complexity measures to characterize and understand complex behaviors in closely related systems with highly interdisciplinary interest, from hard physical models to social systems, the spread of information, ecology, public policies, etc.

Another important aspect of his research is the epistemological study of complex systems. This study focuses on the analysis of the evolution of scientific theories and the dynamics of innovations.

Miguel Fuentes holds a Ph.D. in Physics from Instituto Balseiro, Argentina, and also a Ph.D. in Philosophy of Science from the National University of La Plata, Argentina.

He has worked and studied at places such as the Pierre et Marie Curie University, the Institut Non-Linéaire de Nice, the Center for Nonlinear Studies at Los Alamos National Laboratory and the Santa Fe Institute.

Gilberto Bernardes


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UNAM - USA

Bio: Gilberto Bernardes

Stefani Crabtree


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UNAM - USA

Bio: Stefani Crabtree

Scot Gresham-Lancaster


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UNAM - USA

Bio: Scot Gresham-Lancaster

Chris Kempes


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UNAM - USA

Bio: Chris Kempes

Roger Malina


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UNAM - USA

Bio: Roger Malina

Gustavo Martínez-Mekler


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CONICET, Bariloche - USA

Bio: Gustavo Martínez-Mekler

Tyler Marghetis


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University of California, Merced

Bio: Tyler Marghetis studies the stable regimes and sudden ruptures of human thought and action. His research explores moments of insight in mathematicians, creative leaps in improvising musicians, and the shared conceptions of entire cultures. He is Assistant Professor of Cognitive and Information Sciences at the University of California, Merced, and an Omidyar Fellow at the Santa Fe Institute. A native of Montreal, Canada, he studied mathematics and philosophy as an undergraduate (Concordia) and cognitive science for his PhD (University of California, San Diego), and completed postdoctoral training at Indiana University Bloomington.

Elizabeth Margulis


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UNAM - USA

Bio: Elizabeth Margulis

Helena Miton


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UNAM - USA

Bio: Helena Miton

Marc Santolini


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UNAM - USA

Bio: Marc Santolini

Caroline Shaw


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UNAM - USA

Bio: Caroline Shaw

David Stout


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UNAM - USA

Bio: David Stout

Dmitri Tymoczko


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UNAM - USA

Bio: Dmitri Tymoczko

Sølvi Ystad


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UNAM - USA

Bio: Sølvi Ystad

Damian Zanette


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CONICET, Bariloche - USA

Bio: Damian Zanette

Robert Zatorre


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UNAM - USA

Bio: Robert Zatorre