Share Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Threads Copy url Search results Search 22969 results Filters Content type Content type (-) Lessons (22969) News (1569) People (1321) Chair (352) Editions (340) Page (230) Research (26) Library (14) Annual Chair (12) Award (6) Active filters Lessons Event Raphaël Ceccaldi How Homologous Recombination (HR)-Deficient Tumors Survive Genomic Instability Symposium 24 May 2024 10:45 - 11:30 Series Skepticism and knowledge (continued) Claudine Tiercelin, chair Metaphysics and Philosophy of Knowledge Lecture flora i Fauna de magrove , (detail) 2021, Miquel Barceló. … 20 Feb 2024 → 02 Apr 2024 Series 1979 in the Middle East Henry Laurens, chair Contemporary History of the Arab World Symposium From the cover of Time Europe, January 15, 1979, drawing by Douglas Johnson. On December 2 1978, in a weekly report to President Carter, his National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzeziński spoke of a " arc of crisis " stretching from Bangladesh to … 20 Feb 2024 Event Mariachiara Gasparini Interlocked Animals and the European Inheritance of Mongol Golden Weavings Guest lecturer Summary Tracing back to the four interlocked ibexes walking in a circle that features the so-called "Hunt Patera" (in the Louvre Museum) from the temple of Baal at Ugarit, Syria, dated to the 14th-13th century BCE, this lecture discusses the original … 25 Jun 2024 10:30 - 11:30 Series Experimental approaches to education Acting for education Special events With " Agir pour l'éducation ", the aim of the professors at the Collège de France is to understand, advise and act in all their areas of expertise, in a scientific approach open to dialogue between disciplines, in contact with those involved in education … 12 Jan 2024 → 15 May 2024 Event Emmanuelle Porcher Closing discussions Symposium 23 May 2024 17:30 - 18:00 Event Alexis Joly & Pierre Bonnet Collaborative AI for Plant Biodiversity Monitoring: From Pl@ntNet to GeoPl@ntNet Symposium Abstract Pl@ntNet is a participatory platform based on artificial intelligence to facilitate plant identification and the monitoring of plant biodiversity. In this presentation, we will first look at the technology behind Pl@ntNet, as well as the … 23 May 2024 17:00 - 17:30 Event Nicolas Deguines The Spipoll Project: Monitoring Plant-Visitor Interactions in France with Citizen Science Symposium Abstract In the context of global changes affecting biodiversity worldwide, to what extent flower visitors -and not just bees- are threatened by different environmental factors needs to be evaluated. This is critical if we are to mitigate the effects of … 23 May 2024 16:30 - 17:00 Event Denis Michez European Initiatives for Pollinator Monitoring Symposium Abstract Several studies have now shown at different spatial scale that certain species of the wild bee fauna are in decline in Europe. In response, some European countries and the European commission are implementing action plans to mitigate negative … 23 May 2024 16:00 - 16:30 Event Ute Jandt Plant Biodiversity Trends and Monitoring in Germany Symposium Lecture prepared with Helge Bruelheide (German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany). Abstract In Germany (Central Europe) biodiversity has changed profoundly with respect to composition and spatial … 23 May 2024 14:45 - 15:15 Event Pieter de Frenne forestREplot: A Database of Forest Herb Layer Resurvey Plots Symposium Abstract Resurveys of historical vegetation plots are invaluable to document patterns of change in community composition and diversity. They are also useful to better understand impacts of multiple and interacting global-change drivers. The relevance of … 23 May 2024 14:15 - 14:45 Event Donald M. Waller Long-Term Changes in Forest Plant Communities Have Affected Species' Abundances and Pollinator Resources Symposium Abstract Baseline surveys are essential to assess long-term shifts in plant communities. In the early 2000s, we re-surveyed 293 sites of six forest types in Wisconsin, USA. Data from these sites, first surveyed in the 1950s, allowed us to infer … 23 May 2024 13:45 - 14:15 Event Bodil Ehlers & Christian Damgaard NOVANA – Monitoring Danish Terrestrial Habitats Symposium Abstract The Danish monitoring program NOVANA has recorded the community composition of higher plants and selected soil chemical variable in terrestrial habitats since 2004. The monitoring program was developed as a response to the EU habitat directive … 23 May 2024 11:45 - 12:15 Event Gabrielle Martin Structured Monitoring of Wild Flora in France Demonstrates 15 Years of Plant Community Changes Related to Climate Change and Pollinator Loss Symposium Abstract Standardised long-term biodiversity monitoring schemes, based on repeated visits to fixed sites, offer the possibility of comparing biodiversity in space and time, while avoiding most of the biases associated with opportunistic data, particularly … 23 May 2024 11:15 - 11:45 Event Jérôme Frei & Tobias Roth Biodiversity Monitoring in Switzerland: Current State and Insights into Plant-Pollinator Interactions Symposium Abstract Switzerland's biodiversity is systematically surveyed by an array of programs, each designed to cover distinct facets of biodiversity across spatial scales as well as policy evaluation needs. Although each initiative has discrete aims, … 23 May 2024 10:45 - 11:15 Event María Begoña García Tracking Plant Population Dynamics with a Citizen Science Network Symposium Abstract Long-term monitoring is a crucial tool for anticipating population collapse, which is particularly important in the case of priority species (rare, endangered or threatened). The 'Adopt a plant' programme was launched in 2013 as a collaborative … 23 May 2024 09:45 - 10:15 Event Oliver L. Pescott The National Plant Monitoring Scheme, a New Direction for UK Plant Recording? Symposium Abstract Volunteer-based plant monitoring in the UK has focused historically on distribution mapping, with less emphasis on the collection of data on plant communities and habitats. However, abundance monitoring for other groups of organisms is … 23 May 2024 09:15 - 09:45 Event Entre-Temps Round table " Teaching the Tutsi genocide today " Seminar On Thursday April 25 , Entre-Temps organized two round tables at the Collège de France as part of the commemoration of the 30th anniversary of the Tutsi genocide in Rwanda. An opportunity to reflect collectively on the experiences of this recent past. For … 25 Apr 2024 16:15 - 18:00 Series Berezinsky-Kosterlitz-Thouless transition at critical point Collège de France prize-winners Guest lecturer Lectures by Piet Lammers, winner of the Claude-Antoine Peccot Prize for 2023-2024, proposed by Pr Pierre-Louis Lions. Piet Lammers … 24 Jan 2024 → 14 Feb 2024 Event Mariachiara Gasparini The Sino-Turkic-Iranian Artistic Identity of the Early Tibetans Guest lecturer Summary In the 7th century, the Tibetans began to dominate a broad territory that extended across the Qinghai-Tibet plateau. It was suggested that some ideas and practices of their indigenous Bon religion were acquired from western Tibet, which was once … 21 Jun 2024 10:30 - 11:30 Event Martine Nida-Rümelin The Argument from Understanding for Dualism about Experiential Properties Symposium Chairman : Michael Murez Abstract The argument from understanding defends a dualist view about experiential properties: their nature is non-physical. The premises of the argument are (a) phenomenal essentialism (that phenomenal concepts reveal the nature … 28 Jun 2024 09:10 - 10:45 Event Mariachiara Gasparini The So-Called "Sasanian-Sogdian" Textiles and the Longue Durée of the Beaded Roundel Guest lecturer Abstract This lecture discusses the often-labeled Sasanian or Sogdian silk textiles featuring beaded roundels enclosing animals which became very popular across Eurasia for the entire Middle Ages. Although some animals, such as the duck, ram, or flying … 18 Jun 2024 10:30 - 11:30 Event Maria Tortajada The body in Mareysian devices. From experience to results Special events Abstract The importance of the body in Étienne-Jules Marey's research may seem obvious : the walking man, the trotting horse, the bird and the insect in flight are the privileged objects of the graphic method and chronophotography. Beyond this, the … 15 May 2024 18:00 - 19:00 Event Katalin Farkas A Moderate Proposal for Privileged Access Symposium Presidency : Matheus Valente Abstract I argue that there is good reason to deny that first person access to our conscious states is omniscient, infallible, incorrigible, or reveals their essence. Yet first person access is still privileged compared to … 27 Jun 2024 09:10 - 10:45 Pagination First page Previous page … Page 52 Page 53 Page 54 Page 55 Current page 56 Page 57 Page 58 Page 59 Page 60 … Next page Last page
Event Raphaël Ceccaldi How Homologous Recombination (HR)-Deficient Tumors Survive Genomic Instability Symposium 24 May 2024 10:45 - 11:30
Series Skepticism and knowledge (continued) Claudine Tiercelin, chair Metaphysics and Philosophy of Knowledge Lecture flora i Fauna de magrove , (detail) 2021, Miquel Barceló. … 20 Feb 2024 → 02 Apr 2024
Series 1979 in the Middle East Henry Laurens, chair Contemporary History of the Arab World Symposium From the cover of Time Europe, January 15, 1979, drawing by Douglas Johnson. On December 2 1978, in a weekly report to President Carter, his National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzeziński spoke of a " arc of crisis " stretching from Bangladesh to … 20 Feb 2024
Event Mariachiara Gasparini Interlocked Animals and the European Inheritance of Mongol Golden Weavings Guest lecturer Summary Tracing back to the four interlocked ibexes walking in a circle that features the so-called "Hunt Patera" (in the Louvre Museum) from the temple of Baal at Ugarit, Syria, dated to the 14th-13th century BCE, this lecture discusses the original … 25 Jun 2024 10:30 - 11:30
Series Experimental approaches to education Acting for education Special events With " Agir pour l'éducation ", the aim of the professors at the Collège de France is to understand, advise and act in all their areas of expertise, in a scientific approach open to dialogue between disciplines, in contact with those involved in education … 12 Jan 2024 → 15 May 2024
Event Alexis Joly & Pierre Bonnet Collaborative AI for Plant Biodiversity Monitoring: From Pl@ntNet to GeoPl@ntNet Symposium Abstract Pl@ntNet is a participatory platform based on artificial intelligence to facilitate plant identification and the monitoring of plant biodiversity. In this presentation, we will first look at the technology behind Pl@ntNet, as well as the … 23 May 2024 17:00 - 17:30
Event Nicolas Deguines The Spipoll Project: Monitoring Plant-Visitor Interactions in France with Citizen Science Symposium Abstract In the context of global changes affecting biodiversity worldwide, to what extent flower visitors -and not just bees- are threatened by different environmental factors needs to be evaluated. This is critical if we are to mitigate the effects of … 23 May 2024 16:30 - 17:00
Event Denis Michez European Initiatives for Pollinator Monitoring Symposium Abstract Several studies have now shown at different spatial scale that certain species of the wild bee fauna are in decline in Europe. In response, some European countries and the European commission are implementing action plans to mitigate negative … 23 May 2024 16:00 - 16:30
Event Ute Jandt Plant Biodiversity Trends and Monitoring in Germany Symposium Lecture prepared with Helge Bruelheide (German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany). Abstract In Germany (Central Europe) biodiversity has changed profoundly with respect to composition and spatial … 23 May 2024 14:45 - 15:15
Event Pieter de Frenne forestREplot: A Database of Forest Herb Layer Resurvey Plots Symposium Abstract Resurveys of historical vegetation plots are invaluable to document patterns of change in community composition and diversity. They are also useful to better understand impacts of multiple and interacting global-change drivers. The relevance of … 23 May 2024 14:15 - 14:45
Event Donald M. Waller Long-Term Changes in Forest Plant Communities Have Affected Species' Abundances and Pollinator Resources Symposium Abstract Baseline surveys are essential to assess long-term shifts in plant communities. In the early 2000s, we re-surveyed 293 sites of six forest types in Wisconsin, USA. Data from these sites, first surveyed in the 1950s, allowed us to infer … 23 May 2024 13:45 - 14:15
Event Bodil Ehlers & Christian Damgaard NOVANA – Monitoring Danish Terrestrial Habitats Symposium Abstract The Danish monitoring program NOVANA has recorded the community composition of higher plants and selected soil chemical variable in terrestrial habitats since 2004. The monitoring program was developed as a response to the EU habitat directive … 23 May 2024 11:45 - 12:15
Event Gabrielle Martin Structured Monitoring of Wild Flora in France Demonstrates 15 Years of Plant Community Changes Related to Climate Change and Pollinator Loss Symposium Abstract Standardised long-term biodiversity monitoring schemes, based on repeated visits to fixed sites, offer the possibility of comparing biodiversity in space and time, while avoiding most of the biases associated with opportunistic data, particularly … 23 May 2024 11:15 - 11:45
Event Jérôme Frei & Tobias Roth Biodiversity Monitoring in Switzerland: Current State and Insights into Plant-Pollinator Interactions Symposium Abstract Switzerland's biodiversity is systematically surveyed by an array of programs, each designed to cover distinct facets of biodiversity across spatial scales as well as policy evaluation needs. Although each initiative has discrete aims, … 23 May 2024 10:45 - 11:15
Event María Begoña García Tracking Plant Population Dynamics with a Citizen Science Network Symposium Abstract Long-term monitoring is a crucial tool for anticipating population collapse, which is particularly important in the case of priority species (rare, endangered or threatened). The 'Adopt a plant' programme was launched in 2013 as a collaborative … 23 May 2024 09:45 - 10:15
Event Oliver L. Pescott The National Plant Monitoring Scheme, a New Direction for UK Plant Recording? Symposium Abstract Volunteer-based plant monitoring in the UK has focused historically on distribution mapping, with less emphasis on the collection of data on plant communities and habitats. However, abundance monitoring for other groups of organisms is … 23 May 2024 09:15 - 09:45
Event Entre-Temps Round table " Teaching the Tutsi genocide today " Seminar On Thursday April 25 , Entre-Temps organized two round tables at the Collège de France as part of the commemoration of the 30th anniversary of the Tutsi genocide in Rwanda. An opportunity to reflect collectively on the experiences of this recent past. For … 25 Apr 2024 16:15 - 18:00
Series Berezinsky-Kosterlitz-Thouless transition at critical point Collège de France prize-winners Guest lecturer Lectures by Piet Lammers, winner of the Claude-Antoine Peccot Prize for 2023-2024, proposed by Pr Pierre-Louis Lions. Piet Lammers … 24 Jan 2024 → 14 Feb 2024
Event Mariachiara Gasparini The Sino-Turkic-Iranian Artistic Identity of the Early Tibetans Guest lecturer Summary In the 7th century, the Tibetans began to dominate a broad territory that extended across the Qinghai-Tibet plateau. It was suggested that some ideas and practices of their indigenous Bon religion were acquired from western Tibet, which was once … 21 Jun 2024 10:30 - 11:30
Event Martine Nida-Rümelin The Argument from Understanding for Dualism about Experiential Properties Symposium Chairman : Michael Murez Abstract The argument from understanding defends a dualist view about experiential properties: their nature is non-physical. The premises of the argument are (a) phenomenal essentialism (that phenomenal concepts reveal the nature … 28 Jun 2024 09:10 - 10:45
Event Mariachiara Gasparini The So-Called "Sasanian-Sogdian" Textiles and the Longue Durée of the Beaded Roundel Guest lecturer Abstract This lecture discusses the often-labeled Sasanian or Sogdian silk textiles featuring beaded roundels enclosing animals which became very popular across Eurasia for the entire Middle Ages. Although some animals, such as the duck, ram, or flying … 18 Jun 2024 10:30 - 11:30
Event Maria Tortajada The body in Mareysian devices. From experience to results Special events Abstract The importance of the body in Étienne-Jules Marey's research may seem obvious : the walking man, the trotting horse, the bird and the insect in flight are the privileged objects of the graphic method and chronophotography. Beyond this, the … 15 May 2024 18:00 - 19:00
Event Katalin Farkas A Moderate Proposal for Privileged Access Symposium Presidency : Matheus Valente Abstract I argue that there is good reason to deny that first person access to our conscious states is omniscient, infallible, incorrigible, or reveals their essence. Yet first person access is still privileged compared to … 27 Jun 2024 09:10 - 10:45