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CSLI Calendar, Wednesday, 2 July 2008, vol. 23:41



                    CSLI CALENDAR OF PUBLIC EVENTS
______________________________________________________________________

2 July 2008                   Stanford                 Vol. 23, No. 41
______________________________________________________________________

                     A weekly publication of the
       Center for the Study of Language and Information (CSLI)
         a subdivision of H-STAR, http://hstar.stanford.edu/
      Stanford University, Cordura Hall, Stanford, CA 94305-4101
                    http://www-csli.stanford.edu/
                             ____________

             ACTIVITIES FROM 2 JULY 2008 TO 11 JULY 2008

WEDNESDAY, 2 JULY 2008

THURSDAY, 3 JULY 2008

FRIDAY, 4 JULY 2008 - University Holiday

MONDAY, 7 JULY 2008

TUESDAY, 8 JULY 2008
12:30pm Berkeley Collective Intentionality VI Conference
        UC Berkeley
        "Social Change"
        http://socialontology.berkeley.edu/
        Information below

 7:30pm BayCHI
        George Pake Auditorium at PARC
        "Creating Great Products and Services in an Uncertain World"
        Peter Merholz
        Adaptive Path
        "Unintended Consequences of Healthcare IT"
        Chris Longhurst
        Stanford and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital
        http://www.baychi.org/program/
        Abstracts below

WEDNESDAY, 9 JULY 2008
all day Berkeley Collective Intentionality VI Conference
        UC Berkeley
        "Social Change"
        http://socialontology.berkeley.edu/
        Information below

 7:00pm IEEE Robotics and Automation
        Moffett Field, Mountain View
        "Sun SPOT and its Applications"
        Roger Meike,  Arshan Poursohi, Randall (Randy) Smith, Stephen
        (Steve) Uhler
        Sun Microsystems 
        http://ewh.ieee.org/r6/scv/ras
        Abstract below

THURSDAY, 10 JULY 2008
all day Berkeley Collective Intentionality VI Conference
        UC Berkeley
        "Social Change"
        http://socialontology.berkeley.edu/
        Information below

 4:00pm SRI AI Seminar Series
        EJ228, SRI International
        "Measuring Mind: Event-Specific Knowledge, Narration,
        Metaphor and Referential Activity" 
        Hans Steiner 
        Stanford University School of Medicine)
        http://www.ai.sri.com/seminars/
        Abstract below

 4:00pm PARC Forum
        George Pake Auditorium at PARC
        "The Physical Environment - The Interface We Move Through"
        Matthew Moore
        Hipbone Design
        http://www.parc.com/forum/
        Abstract below

 7:00pm Summer Science Lecture
        Cantor Arts Center Lawn
        "Why is Earthquake Prediction so Difficult?"
        Gregory C. Beroza
        Geophysics, Stanford
        http://oso.stanford.edu/lectures.html

FRIDAY, 11 JULY 2008
all day Berkeley Collective Intentionality VI Conference
        UC Berkeley
        "Social Change"
        http://socialontology.berkeley.edu/
        Information below
                             ____________

Stanford Blood Center: Shortage of O, A-, B-, and AB-.  For an
appointment: <http://bloodcenter.stanford.edu/> or call 650-723-7831.
It only takes an hour of your time and you get free cookies.  
                             ____________

                               UPCOMING

             The Summer Institute at Wallenberg Hall 2008
                   http://mediax.stanford.edu/WSI/

In 2008, the Institute offers several independent but related one
and two-day workshops over three weeks between July 28 and August 15;
participants register for each workshop independently. Depending on
your area of interest you can attend just one, or several!  Attendance
is capped in each session, guaranteeing a personal learning experience
for all.
                             ____________

                                NOTES

Stanford alumni with children 10 and over, might want to look at the 
Camp EDAY: Robots, Racers & Rockets on July 12.  See
http://soe.stanford.edu/eday08/index.html 
                             ____________

           BERKELEY COLLECTIVE INTENTIONALITY VI CONFERENCE
             on Tuesday - Friday, 8-11 July 2008, all day
                             UC Berkeley
                 http://socialontology.berkeley.edu/

                           "Social Change"

Preliminary Schedule

Tuesday, 8 July 2008

12:30 - 13:30 Opening Address and Keynote: John R. Searle
              Maude Fife Room, 315 Wheeler Hall

Session A IIS Room 
Session B John Harris Room 
Session C Howison Library

13:40 - 14:20 Session A: "The Social Brain" Hudin

13:40 - 14:20 Session B: "On Virtual Communities: Individual
              Motivations,  We-Rationality and Collective
              Intentionality" Arena & Conein  

13:40 - 14:20 Session C: "Do Artworks Look at You?" Kobow

14:30 - 15:10 Session A: "Collective Intentionality, Methodological
              Solipsism, and Current  Neurosciences"  Vicari 

14:30 - 15:10 Session B: "Institutions,Information and Communication
              Technology"  Miller, S.  

14:30 - 15:10 Session C: "Andreas Gursky, Google Earth, and the
              Achievement of the World Picture" Moisey 

15:20 - 16:00 Session A: "Why Nature and Development go together in
              Naturalizing Collective Intentionality" Gallotti 

15:20 - 16:00 Session B: "Re-Expressing Normative Pragmatism in the
              Medium of Computation" Evans  

15:20 - 16:00 Session C: "The Social Ontology of Musical Works" Blackwell
              
16:10 - 16:50 Session A: "Deceptive Properties and Modeling Social
              Change" Epstein 

16:10 - 16:50 Session B: "Autonomy and the Net" Giovagnoli 

16:10 - 16:50 Session C: "Jazz and Collective Intentionality" Kronfeld

17:00 - 18:00 Invited Speaker: Margaret Gilbert, "Commands and their 
              Practical Import"
              Howison Library
              http://socialontology.berkeley.edu/abstracts/Gilbert.pdf
              
18:30 Reception at the Women's Faculty Club

Wednesday, 9 July 2008

08:30- 09:30 Keynote: Frans De Waal, "Individual and Group Level
              Cooperation in Other Primates"
              Howison Library
              
Session D Howison Library 
Session E IIS Room 
Session F John Harris Room
              
09:40 - 10:20 Session D: "Human Kinds as Conferred Kinds" Sveinsdottir 

09:40 - 10:20 Session E: "Mutual Reinforcement and the Stability of
              Shared Intention" Alonso  

09:40 - 10:20 Session F: "Social Knowledge, Citizenship and
              Non-Domination in the Age of Experts" Wierzchoslawski
              
10:30 - 11:10 Session D: "Race as an Institutional Fact" Mathiesen 

10:30 - 11:10 Session E: "Collective Reasoning and Commitment" Miller, Kaarlo 

10:30 - 11:10 Session F: "Collective Intentionality and Oppressive
              Societies" Moltchanova 
              
11:20 - 12:00 Session D: "Value-guided and Problem-guided Collective
              Intentions" Menendez-Viso   

11:20 - 12:00 Session E: "Reasoning About Collectives" Hindriks/Schweikard  

11:20 - 12:00 Session F: "We-Intentionality at the Core of Human
              Perception" Henning
              
12:00 - 13:30 Lunch Break

13:30 - 14:30 Invited Speaker: Georg Meggle, "Meaning as a Social Fact"
              Howison Library
              
Session D Howison Library 
Session E IIS Room 
Session F John Harris Room
              
14:40 - 15:20 Session D: "Young Children's Social Categories and the
              Development of Discrimination"  Kalish

14:40 - 15:20 Session E: "Mapping  the  Study  of Collective
              Intentionality" Hakli & Mäkelä  

14:40 - 15:20 Session F: "The Role of the Background in the Creation,
              Maintenance and Collapse of Institutions" Schmitz 

15:30 - 16:10 Session D: "Language and Institution in Searle's  The
              Construction of Social Reality" Moural

15:30 - 16:10 Session E: "Collective Intentionality and Methodological
              Individualism" Schmid 

15:30 - 16:10 Session F: "Further Elaborations on Searle's Concept of
              the Background of Collective Intentionality" Durt

16:20 - 17:00 Session D: "Natural Things vs. Social Existences and
              Natural vs. Social Kinds"  Psarros

16:20 - 17:00 Session E: "From the Mental to the Social; Collective
              Intentionality's Double Role" Kaldis 

16:20 - 17:00 Session F: "Economics Modeling and the Background" Passinksy

Thursday, 10 July 2008

08:30 - 09:30 Keynote: Philip Pettit, "Real Pattern and Group Agency"
              Howison Library

(at this point the original's session's names became a bit odd, I've
renamed them)               

Session G Howison Library 
Session H IIS Room 
Session I John Harris Room

09:40 - 10:20 Session G: "Shared Emotions" Salmela

09:40 - 10:20 Session H: "We Intentions as Intentions of Individuals" Lang

09:40 - 10:20 Session I: "Autonomy, the Democratic Attitude and Social
              Change" Swindler 

10:30 - 11:10 Session G: "Shared Feeling and Affective Contagion" Konzelmann

10:30 - 11:10 Session H: "Joining  In" Smith

10:30 - 11:10 Session I: "The Social Ontology of Freedom" Hindriks

11.20 - 12:00 Session G: "'Me' against 'We,' Collective Emotions and
              Individual Reactions to Ingroup Misdeeds" Piff &
              Martinez 

11.20 - 12:00 Session H: "Collective Action and  Proxy  Agency" Ludwig

11.20 - 12:00 Session I: "How is Social Ontology Possible?" Hällström

12:00 - 13:30 Lunch Break

13:30 - 14:30 Invited Speaker: Sally Haslanger, "Race, Gender and
              Ideological Construction
              Howison Library

Session G Howison Library 
Session H IIS Room 
Session I John Harris Room

14:40 - 15:20 Session G: "The Status Function of Art" Vega

14:40 - 15:20 Session H: "Agent Causation and Collective Agency"
              Schulte-Ostermann  

14:40 - 15:20 Session I: "Collective Ethnic Identities as Status
              Function" Saaristo & Kreander 

15:30 - 16:10 Session G: "Collective Perception, Feelings and Trust" Seemann

15:30 - 16:10 Session H: "Shared Intention, Joint Action and Joint
              Authorship" Tollefsen 

15:30 - 16:10 Session I: "Public History as Collective Action" Lapointe

16:20 - 17:00 Session G: "Collective Intentionality and the Kingdom of
              Ends" Sadler

16:20 - 17:00 Session H: "Defining Minimal Cooperation" Paternotte

16:20 - 17:00 Session I: "Governments and Social Change"  Gusejnova

Friday, 11 July 2008

08:30 - 09:30  Keynote: Tony Lawson, "Two Approaches to Social
               Ontology: Competitors, Complements or Basically the Same Thing?
               Howison Library 

Session J Howison Library 
Session K IIS Room 
Session L John Harris Room

09:40 - 10:20 Session J: "Hayek's Legal Knowledge" Wedman

09:40 - 10:20 Session K: "The Ontology of Corporations" Derstine

09:40 - 10:20 Session L: "Apes, Babies, and Collective Intentionality" Fusco

10:30 - 11:10 Session J: "Living Together in a Legal Practice" Bernal

10:30 - 11:10 Session K: "Who or What  is  the  Company Man?" Roth

10:30 - 11:10 Session L: "Hoofed Mammals & Elephants Consciousness,
              Ontology and Collective Intentionality" Kiley-Worthington

11:20 - 12:00 Session J: "Legislative Intentionalism by Proxy" MacPherson

11:20 - 12:00 Session K: "Where the Distribution Problem Ends and
              'Real' Collective Responsibility Begins" Chant

11:20 - 12:00 Session L: "Reciprocal Normativity, Deontic Power and
              Shared Valuing" Gloor

12:00 - 13:30 Lunch Break

13:30 - 14:30 Invited speaker:  Raimo Tuomela, "Group Thinking"
              Howison Library 

Session J Howison Library 
Session K IIS Room 
Session L John Harris Room

14:40 - 15:20 Session J: "On the Identity of Technological Objects and
              User Innovation in Function" Faulkner & Runde 

14:40 - 15:20 Session K: "Violence as an Intentional Act" Salice

14:40 - 15:20 Session L: "Rules, Collective Intentionality, Identity
              and Social Ontology" Martins

15:30 - 16:10 Session J: "Power, Collective Acceptance and Recognition" Stahl


15:30 - 16:10 Session K: "A Specification of Searle's Theory of
              Institutions in the Realm of Politics" Gran 

15:30 - 16:10 Session L: "Collective Intentions as Effects of
              Influence" Anton 

20:00 Dinner & Party at the Bancroft Hotel (fee required)
                             ____________

                                BAYCHI
               on Tuesday, 8 July 2008, 7:30pm - 9:30pm
                     George Pake Auditorium, PARC
                    http://www.baychi.org/program/

     "Creating Great Products and Services in an Uncertain World"
                            Peter Merholz
                            Adaptive Path

Please note: This event is subject to change.

The way most organizations think and work on products and services
isn't suited to the unpredictable world we live in. Instead, companies
need new ways of thinking and working to adapt into innovative, agile,
and commercially successful organizations who creates great products
and services. Peter Merholz, one of the authors of Adaptive Path's new
book, Subject to Change, will share a handful of breakthrough ideas
for succeeding in a future that you can't predict.

About the Speaker: Peter Merholz is president and one of the founders
of Adaptive Path, serving clients including Hallmark, Intel, Wells
Fargo, United Airlines, Vanguard Financial.

Peter is an internationally recognized thought leader on user
experience.  His blogs and his essays for Adaptive Path demonstrate
his foresight on issues of information architecture, organizational
change, and product strategy. Peter's thought leadership is perhaps
most dubiously demonstrated in his coining of the term "blog" in 1999
when it was a nascent genre.

              "Unintended Consequences of Healthcare IT"
                           Chris Longhurst
           Stanford and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital

Although many experts view electronic medical records as a
transformational tool in the journey toward high reliability in
healthcare, recent research highlights the unintended consequences of
suboptimal implementations. These undesirable outcomes can be avoided
or mitigated through the use of objective software engineering
practices and evidence-based medical literature. In this talk, we will
share the story of how Lucile Packard Children's Hospital used these
best practices to guide a highly successful clinical transformation,
and speculate about the future of healthcare IT.

About the Speaker: Dr. Chris Longhurst is a board-certified
pediatrician and Clinical Assistant Professor at the Stanford
University School of Medicine. He also holds an administrative
appointment at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital as the Medical
Director for Clinical Informatics, where he has spent the last several
years helping to lead the organization through implementation of
computerized physician order entry (CPOE).

Dr. Longhurst received his B.S. from the University of California, San
Diego in 1996, graduating cum laude with a major in molecular biology
and a minor in computer science. He matriculated at the University of
California, Davis, receiving his M.S. in medical informatics in 2000
and his M.D. in 2001. Dr. Longhurst completed his residency training
in pediatrics at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford in
2004.

Chris has published a number of articles in peer-reviewed journals and
speaks nationally on topics that include preparing for CPOE,
evidence-based implementation of clinical decision support systems,
and unintended consequences of healthcare IT projects.
                             ____________

                     IEEE ROBOTICS AND AUTOMATION
                  on Wednesday, 9 July 2008, 7:00pm
                CMU West, Moffett Field, Mountain View
                    http://ewh.ieee.org/r6/scv/ras

                   "Sun SPOT and its Applications"
Roger Meike,  Arshan Poursohi, Randall (Randy) Smith, Stephen (Steve) Uhler
                           Sun Microsystems

The Sun Small Programmable Object Technology (SPOT) is a small,
wireless, battery powered experimental platform. It is programmed
almost entirely in Java to allow regular programmers to create
projects that used to require specialized embedded system development
skills. The hardware platform includes a range of built-in sensors as
well as the ability to easily interface to external devices.  Both the
hardware and software are open sourced.

This talk describes the Sun SPOT and its applications.

About the Speakers: Roger Meike is Senior Director, Area 51 and
Director of Operations, Sun Microsystems Laboratories.  His background
is in cognitive science and his career has lead him back and forth
between new start companies and large research organizations.  While
his background is mostly in software, he also enjoys consorting with
hardware folks.  He has been accused of being many things including
photo enthusiast, sailor, ham radio operator, musician and
techno-geek/nerd.

Arshan Poursohi is a Researcher for Sun Microsystems Laboratories,
working on the Sun Small Programmable Object Technology (Sun SPOT)
project.  His research interests include Advanced Network
Applications, biologically-inspired computing, Distributed Systems,
Intermittently-connected devices, Linux, Mobile Computing, Multi-user
cooperative environments, Networking, Peer to peer, practical
automated reasoning and Multi-Agent Systems.

He grew up near a farm outside of New Zealand, at an early age he
learned to use tools and speak using words. Following that he went on
to develop systems for locomotion and chemical digestion of organic
matter. Then he worked on various models social interaction in small
and large groups, which he continues to use today. sometimes.

Stephen Uhler is the Principal Investigator of the Enterprise PDA
project.  Before Enterprise PDA, Uhler was the PI for the Brazil
project, which included an experimental web application development
environment ideal for web-enabling devices, aggregating content from
other web applications, and building personal web portals that filter
and modify aggregated content.

Prior to that, Uhler was the creator of the reverse-proxy, a key
component of the sun.net product, the architect and designer of the
supplier.net secure supply chain integration system, and a member of
the SunLabs TCL project, where he pioneered the TCL embedded web
server technology.

Randy Smith is a Senior Staff Engineer at Sun Microsystems
Laboratories, where he has been principal investigator in several
areas, including projects in visualization technologies and radio
frequency ID tags. He previously worked on the Kansas project, a 2D
virtual world for creating multi-user simulations. Kansas was part of
the world's largest study of distributed synchronous small group
learning, another research project he lead. He was formerly co-leader
of the Self project. Before joining Sun, he worked at Xerox PARC for
eight years, where he developed a virtual world programming
environment called the Alternate Reality Kit, and, with David Ungar,
designed the Self language. His Ph.D. is in theoretical physics from
the University of California at San Diego.

His hobbies include playing trumpet and jazz piano. He is the trumpet
player in the jazz octet Octobop, whose recent CD is available online.

Randy recently represented Sun at the Santa Fe Institute's Complex
Systems Summer School where he worked on a model of migrating
computational agents.  He is proud winner of the Bottle Of TESCO
Champagne Award for best essay at the 1997 UNESCO Workshop on Learning
Environments!
                             ____________

                        SRI AI SEMINAR SERIES
              on Thursday, 10 July 2008, 4:00pm - 5:30pm
                       EJ228, SRI International
                  http://www.ai.sri.com/seminars/

        "Measuring Mind: Event-Specific Knowledge, Narration,
                  Metaphor and Referential Activity"
                             Hans Steiner
               Stanford University School of Medicine)

Much of psychiatric diagnosis and treatment depends on the hermeneutic
approach to behavior patterns and narrated events. The content of
mental activity is challenging to measure reliably and validly.
Surveys, questionnaires and projective tests all have major
limitations; imaging methods at the present time cannot capture
complex, layered mental states.  New approaches have to be found.

Examining narratives offers an opportunity, especially if hermeneutic
analyses can be computerized to remove observer bias.

We will present data on the DAAP Referential Activity Measure by Bucci
and Maskit; the Temporal Juncture Method by Nelson; and the Metaphor
Approach described by Lakoff.

About the Speaker: Hans Steiner was born in Vienna, Austria and
received his Doctor medicinae universalis (Dr. med. univ. = M.D.) from
the Medical Faculty of the University of Vienna, Austria, in 1972. He
completed his residency in adult Psychiatry at SUNY Upstate Medical
Center, his child and adolescent psychiatry residency at the
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. Currently, Dr. Steiner is
Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Child Psychiatry and
Human Development at the Stanford University School of Medicine. He is
a Distinguished Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association (APA),
a Fellow of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
(AACAP), and the Academy of Psychosomatic Medicine (APM). He is an
invited member of the Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry (GAP).
                             ____________

                              PARC FORUM
              on Thursday, 10 July 2008, 4:00pm - 5:00pm
                     George Pake Auditorium, PARC
           (directions at <http://www.parc.com/directions>)
                      http://www.parc.com/forum/

      "The Physical Environment - The Interface We Move Through"
                            Matthew Moore
                            Hipbone Design

The most consistently interactive experience we have in the modern
world is moving through space, making choices about where we look,
what we do, and how we interact with people around us. In designing
retail spaces, museums, and other public places I am constantly struck
by the sense that the environment being created sets a mood/feel and
then acts as an interface that allows the user to make informed
choices and act at the appropriate moments. Three rooms accessible
from a center room vs. three rooms accessed sequentially very simply
illustrates how space arrangement can act as an interface that affects
experience. In retail design we frequently talk about how customers
experience things at 100, 15, and 2 feet - and how the appropriate
information and choices vary at each distance. In this forum we will
look at how the design of physical environments with their inherently
extreme bandwidth can be looked at through the lens of the language of
interface. We will also investigate how the broad interface of the
physical environment affects increasingly pervasive computer
interfaces and vice versa. 

About the Speaker: As a generalist in the realm of communicating ideas
and emotions and a specialist in the design of built environments,
Matthew Moore has worked over 20 years with leadership in major
cultural institutions, Fortune 500 companies, as well as leading
architects, engineers, and designers creating projects ranging from
new museums to sign spectaculars in Times Square to big box retail to
outdoor site installations.

He led the environmental design department as well as sat on the
executive strategy team during his 15 year tenure at ESI Design
Incorporated <http://www.esidesign.com>, one of the
leading experience design firms in the country. While there, he was
either the principal or the lead environmental designer on 40+
projects including the recently opened College Basketball Experience
and National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in Kansas City - a new
from the ground up facility that is redefining what a Hall of Fame
might be as well as being an entertainment destination in its own
right. Other recent work includes working closely with senior
management at Best Buy to develop new store concepts including the
store prototype to be rolled out this summer. In both these projects
besides wearing a traditional design "hat," Matthew worked with
marketing and business teams to develop the overall strategies that
these projects would fit into. Other major work includes being the
project designer for the all the interpretive elements in the Kennedy
Center for The Performing Arts last major renovation, the Pope John
Paul II Cultural Center in Washington DC, the Reuters Sign in Times
Square, and the American Family Immigration History Center at Ellis
Island in New York. 

He is now the principal of Hipbone Design LLC
<http://www.hipbonedesign.com/> a company specializing in the creation
of dynamic public experiences in the museum, re-tail, and corporate
markets. Through this work and through teaching exhibit design at
Pratt Institute and the Fashion Institute of Technology (both in New
York City) Matthew has continued to develop overarching ideas of
connecting people in public places, the effect of cumulative details,
and design functionality (including aesthetic, emotional, and
inspirational functionality). His training was in scenic design for
the theater - under-graduate studies at the State University of New
York at Purchase and graduate studies at the Yale School of Drama.
                             ____________

                             END MATERIAL

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