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 Series Plant-pollinator interactions, a showcase for the biodiversity crisis Emmanuelle Porcher, chair Biodiversity and ecosystems Opening lecture 18 Jan 2024 Event Tony Hunter New Insights into Intercellular Crosstalk between Different Cell Populations in Pancreatic Tumors That Can Be Translated into the Clinic Guest lecturer Abstract Pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PDA) is one of the most lethal cancers, primarily due to late diagnosis. PDA is a highly stromal (desmoplastic) and poorly vascularized tumor with a dense extracellular matrix; only ~10% of the cells in the tumor are … 27 May 2024 17:00 - 18:00 Series Learning and generation by random sampling Stéphane Mallat, chair Data science Seminar 17 Jan 2024 → 13 Mar 2024 Series Learning and generation by random sampling Stéphane Mallat, chair Data science Lecture Spherical virtual bouquet composed with the help of a generative AI system (Dall-e via ChatGPT from Bing Nov 2023), with helical curves and semi-random growth, Lamiot. The modeling of large-scale data is essentially probabilistic. Model learning, … 17 Jan 2024 → 13 Mar 2024 Event Christophe Nihan Feeding the dead : genesis and transformations of a funerary practice in ancient Israel Guest lecturer Funerary stele of Katumuwa , Zincirli, 8th century b.c. OIMP 37. In Remembrance of Me: Feasting with the Dead in the Ancient Middle East (ed. V.R. Herrmann, J.D. Schloen), Chicago, The Oriental Institute, 2014. Abstract The practice of feeding a family's … 26 Apr 2024 11:00 - 12:00 Series Law and legal life in Upper Mesopotamia from the 18th century BC. Dominique Charpin, chair Mesopotamian Civilization Lecture Money loan contract from King Zimri-Lim. As part of the PCEHM program (" Power and written culture in Upper Mesopotamia in the 18th century BC "), funded by the ANR under aapg 2022, this year's lecture will focus on law and legal life. While historians … 15 Jan 2024 → 25 Mar 2024 Series Single Metal Atom Catalysts for Electrochemical Energy Conversion Marc Fontecave, chair Chemistry of Biological Processes Guest lecturer 20 Dec 2023 Event Didier Fassin Reproducing inequality Lecture 14 May 2024 15:00 - 16:00 Event Karl-Oskar Lindgren Breaking the Cycle: Education's Role in Reducing Political Inequality Guest lecturer Abstract In a famous statement, Alexis de Tocqueville once highlighted the love for equality as a defining characteristic of democratic nations. Yet, despite this observation, inequality of political opportunity remains widespread in most developed … 23 Apr 2024 17:30 - 18:30 Event Karl-Oskar Lindgren Perpetuity of the Past: How Political Inequality is Transmitted Across Generations Guest lecturer Abstract The notion that every citizen should have equal opportunities to influence political decisions is a fundamental principle in liberal democratic thought. However, decades of political science research have consistently shown that individuals with … 22 Apr 2024 17:30 - 18:30 Event Robert May The Meta-Semantics of Ideological Words Guest lecturer Abstract The first lecture will develop the notion of ideologies as folk scientific theories, the institutionalization of those ideologies, and how propaganda supports the principles and values of ideologies so construed through aesthetic and linguistic … 21 Jun 2024 17:00 - 18:00 Series Mari's legal texts Dominique Charpin, chair Mesopotamian Civilization Seminar Money loan contract from King Zimri-Lim. Photographs will be used to study contracts published in ARM 8 or as yet unpublished, depending on the lecture theme. Knowledge of cuneiform writing is a prerequisite for the … 11 Jan 2024 → 22 Feb 2024 Series Non-Buddhist temples in Bactria and Sogdiana (continued). 2) New archaeological data on Sogdian oases Frantz Grenet, chair History and Cultures of Pre-Islamic Central Asia Lecture Punjikent, Temple II, 6th century AD : the goddesses Nana and Demeter lamenting over Takhsich, a young goddess who has died but is destined to rise again. This year's lecture will focus on : 1) Non-Buddhist temples in Bactria and Sogdiana (continuation … 11 Jan 2024 → 28 Mar 2024 Series Fighting poverty : from science to practice Esther Duflo, chair Poverty and Public Policy Lecture Illustration by Cheyenne Olivier, from the book Imai, à la rescousse Esther Duflo / Cheyenne Olivier, Seuil jeunesse, 2023. Following on from the 2022-2023 lecture, this course will provide an overview of the most important topics concerning the lives of … 10 Jan 2024 → 14 Feb 2024 Series The energy transition : today and tomorrow (II) Marc Fontecave, chair Chemistry of Biological Processes Seminar 10 Jan 2024 → 13 Feb 2024 Event Marco Bonechi From 1968 (October, not May) to 2024. Ebla, from darkness to light Guest lecturer Abstract Abstract of cuneiform text discoveries at Tell Mardikh/Ebla and contrast with what was known before 1968. Main scientific debates on archival texts since the 1970s, with typological analysis. Subsequent discussion of post-Ebla archival texts and … 3 Jun 2024 17:00 - 18:00 Series The energy transition : today and tomorrow (II) Marc Fontecave, chair Chemistry of Biological Processes Lecture The combination of climate change, the inherent limits of natural resources and the need for energy sovereignty are forcing humankind to embark on an energy transition and take up the formidable challenge of replacing fossil fuels (coal, gas and oil) … 10 Jan 2024 → 13 Feb 2024 Event Tony Hunter Noncanonical Protein Phosphorylation – Is Histidine Phosphorylation Used as a Reversible Regulatory Mechanism? Guest lecturer Abstract Protein phosphorylation is not restricted to serine, threonine and tyrosine, but can occur on six other amino acids, including histidine. In this lecture, I will discuss what is known about non-canonical protein phosphorylation, focusing on our … 21 May 2024 17:00 - 18:00 Series The politics of love Patrick Boucheron, chair History of Powers in Western Europe, 13th to 16th century Lecture New York, Pierpont Morgan Library, Ms. M.346, fol. 2 v. From the twelfth to the sixteenth centuries, from one reformation to another, but also from one renaissance to another, the language of love was massively present in European literature. As a … 09 Jan 2024 → 02 Apr 2024 Series How to read William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Seminar Nicolas Poussin, Les Bergers d'Arcadie (Et in Arcadia ego ), second version, circa 1638, Musée du Louvre. Last year's lecture focused on building mental libraries, finding lost works and editing texts. But once the texts and corpora are there, what can we … 09 Jan 2024 → 19 Mar 2024 Series How to read William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Lecture Nicolas Poussin, Les Bergers d'Arcadie(Et in Arcadia ego ), second version, circa 1638, Musée du Louvre Last year's lecture focused on building mental libraries, finding lost works and editing texts. But once the texts and corpora are there, what can we … 09 Jan 2024 → 19 Mar 2024 Event Didier Fassin Presumption of guilt Lecture 7 May 2024 15:00 - 16:00 Event Sebastian Jessberger How Aging Affects Neural Stem Cell Behavior Guest lecturer Abstract In this lecture, I will discuss recent work showing the effects of advancing age on neural stem cells. For example, his group had provided the first description of a diffusion barrier in the endplasmic reticulum (ER) in mammalian cells that … 18 Jun 2024 17:00 - 18:00 Event Francesco Lacquaniti Evolutionary and Developmental Modules of Locomotion Symposium Moderated by : Christine Assaiante (CNRS, Marseille) … 2 Jul 2024 09:00 - 09:35 Pagination First page Previous page … Page 56 Page 57 Page 58 Page 59 Current page 60 Page 61 Page 62 Page 63 Page 64 … Next page Last page
Series Plant-pollinator interactions, a showcase for the biodiversity crisis Emmanuelle Porcher, chair Biodiversity and ecosystems Opening lecture 18 Jan 2024
Event Tony Hunter New Insights into Intercellular Crosstalk between Different Cell Populations in Pancreatic Tumors That Can Be Translated into the Clinic Guest lecturer Abstract Pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PDA) is one of the most lethal cancers, primarily due to late diagnosis. PDA is a highly stromal (desmoplastic) and poorly vascularized tumor with a dense extracellular matrix; only ~10% of the cells in the tumor are … 27 May 2024 17:00 - 18:00
Series Learning and generation by random sampling Stéphane Mallat, chair Data science Seminar 17 Jan 2024 → 13 Mar 2024
Series Learning and generation by random sampling Stéphane Mallat, chair Data science Lecture Spherical virtual bouquet composed with the help of a generative AI system (Dall-e via ChatGPT from Bing Nov 2023), with helical curves and semi-random growth, Lamiot. The modeling of large-scale data is essentially probabilistic. Model learning, … 17 Jan 2024 → 13 Mar 2024
Event Christophe Nihan Feeding the dead : genesis and transformations of a funerary practice in ancient Israel Guest lecturer Funerary stele of Katumuwa , Zincirli, 8th century b.c. OIMP 37. In Remembrance of Me: Feasting with the Dead in the Ancient Middle East (ed. V.R. Herrmann, J.D. Schloen), Chicago, The Oriental Institute, 2014. Abstract The practice of feeding a family's … 26 Apr 2024 11:00 - 12:00
Series Law and legal life in Upper Mesopotamia from the 18th century BC. Dominique Charpin, chair Mesopotamian Civilization Lecture Money loan contract from King Zimri-Lim. As part of the PCEHM program (" Power and written culture in Upper Mesopotamia in the 18th century BC "), funded by the ANR under aapg 2022, this year's lecture will focus on law and legal life. While historians … 15 Jan 2024 → 25 Mar 2024
Series Single Metal Atom Catalysts for Electrochemical Energy Conversion Marc Fontecave, chair Chemistry of Biological Processes Guest lecturer 20 Dec 2023
Event Karl-Oskar Lindgren Breaking the Cycle: Education's Role in Reducing Political Inequality Guest lecturer Abstract In a famous statement, Alexis de Tocqueville once highlighted the love for equality as a defining characteristic of democratic nations. Yet, despite this observation, inequality of political opportunity remains widespread in most developed … 23 Apr 2024 17:30 - 18:30
Event Karl-Oskar Lindgren Perpetuity of the Past: How Political Inequality is Transmitted Across Generations Guest lecturer Abstract The notion that every citizen should have equal opportunities to influence political decisions is a fundamental principle in liberal democratic thought. However, decades of political science research have consistently shown that individuals with … 22 Apr 2024 17:30 - 18:30
Event Robert May The Meta-Semantics of Ideological Words Guest lecturer Abstract The first lecture will develop the notion of ideologies as folk scientific theories, the institutionalization of those ideologies, and how propaganda supports the principles and values of ideologies so construed through aesthetic and linguistic … 21 Jun 2024 17:00 - 18:00
Series Mari's legal texts Dominique Charpin, chair Mesopotamian Civilization Seminar Money loan contract from King Zimri-Lim. Photographs will be used to study contracts published in ARM 8 or as yet unpublished, depending on the lecture theme. Knowledge of cuneiform writing is a prerequisite for the … 11 Jan 2024 → 22 Feb 2024
Series Non-Buddhist temples in Bactria and Sogdiana (continued). 2) New archaeological data on Sogdian oases Frantz Grenet, chair History and Cultures of Pre-Islamic Central Asia Lecture Punjikent, Temple II, 6th century AD : the goddesses Nana and Demeter lamenting over Takhsich, a young goddess who has died but is destined to rise again. This year's lecture will focus on : 1) Non-Buddhist temples in Bactria and Sogdiana (continuation … 11 Jan 2024 → 28 Mar 2024
Series Fighting poverty : from science to practice Esther Duflo, chair Poverty and Public Policy Lecture Illustration by Cheyenne Olivier, from the book Imai, à la rescousse Esther Duflo / Cheyenne Olivier, Seuil jeunesse, 2023. Following on from the 2022-2023 lecture, this course will provide an overview of the most important topics concerning the lives of … 10 Jan 2024 → 14 Feb 2024
Series The energy transition : today and tomorrow (II) Marc Fontecave, chair Chemistry of Biological Processes Seminar 10 Jan 2024 → 13 Feb 2024
Event Marco Bonechi From 1968 (October, not May) to 2024. Ebla, from darkness to light Guest lecturer Abstract Abstract of cuneiform text discoveries at Tell Mardikh/Ebla and contrast with what was known before 1968. Main scientific debates on archival texts since the 1970s, with typological analysis. Subsequent discussion of post-Ebla archival texts and … 3 Jun 2024 17:00 - 18:00
Series The energy transition : today and tomorrow (II) Marc Fontecave, chair Chemistry of Biological Processes Lecture The combination of climate change, the inherent limits of natural resources and the need for energy sovereignty are forcing humankind to embark on an energy transition and take up the formidable challenge of replacing fossil fuels (coal, gas and oil) … 10 Jan 2024 → 13 Feb 2024
Event Tony Hunter Noncanonical Protein Phosphorylation – Is Histidine Phosphorylation Used as a Reversible Regulatory Mechanism? Guest lecturer Abstract Protein phosphorylation is not restricted to serine, threonine and tyrosine, but can occur on six other amino acids, including histidine. In this lecture, I will discuss what is known about non-canonical protein phosphorylation, focusing on our … 21 May 2024 17:00 - 18:00
Series The politics of love Patrick Boucheron, chair History of Powers in Western Europe, 13th to 16th century Lecture New York, Pierpont Morgan Library, Ms. M.346, fol. 2 v. From the twelfth to the sixteenth centuries, from one reformation to another, but also from one renaissance to another, the language of love was massively present in European literature. As a … 09 Jan 2024 → 02 Apr 2024
Series How to read William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Seminar Nicolas Poussin, Les Bergers d'Arcadie (Et in Arcadia ego ), second version, circa 1638, Musée du Louvre. Last year's lecture focused on building mental libraries, finding lost works and editing texts. But once the texts and corpora are there, what can we … 09 Jan 2024 → 19 Mar 2024
Series How to read William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Lecture Nicolas Poussin, Les Bergers d'Arcadie(Et in Arcadia ego ), second version, circa 1638, Musée du Louvre Last year's lecture focused on building mental libraries, finding lost works and editing texts. But once the texts and corpora are there, what can we … 09 Jan 2024 → 19 Mar 2024
Event Sebastian Jessberger How Aging Affects Neural Stem Cell Behavior Guest lecturer Abstract In this lecture, I will discuss recent work showing the effects of advancing age on neural stem cells. For example, his group had provided the first description of a diffusion barrier in the endplasmic reticulum (ER) in mammalian cells that … 18 Jun 2024 17:00 - 18:00
Event Francesco Lacquaniti Evolutionary and Developmental Modules of Locomotion Symposium Moderated by : Christine Assaiante (CNRS, Marseille) … 2 Jul 2024 09:00 - 09:35