Sync: The Emerging Science of Spontaneous Order
A Lecture by Steven Strogatz
October 9, 2003 at 7:00pm in 10-250.
What caused hundreds of Japanese children to fall into seizures while watching
an episode of the cartoon show Pokemon? Why do women roommates sometimes
find that their menstrual periods occur in sync?
The tendency to synchronize is one of the most mysterious and pervasive drives
in all of nature. Every night along the tidal rivers of Malaysia, thousands of
fireflies flash in silent, hypnotic unison; the moon spins in perfect resonance
with its orbit around the Earth; the intense coherence of a laser comes from
trillions of atoms pulsing together. All these astonishing feats of synchrony
occur spontaneously -- almost as if the universe had an overwhelming desire for
order.
On the surface, these phenomena might seem unrelated. After all, the forces
that synchronize fireflies have nothing to do with those in a laser. But at a
deeper level, they are all connected by the same mathematical theme:
self-organization, the spontaneous emergence of order out of chaos.
Steven Strogatz, professor of applied mathematics at Cornell University and
author of Sync: The Emerging Science of Spontaneous Order, will convey the
excitement of this new field in a lecture aimed at a general audience.
He has been hailed as " a gifted and inspiring communicator" (New Scientist)
and "a first-rate storyteller and an even better teacher" (Nature). Popular
Science called Sync "the most exciting new book of the spring...
masterful... a gem."
A question and answer period follows the presentation.
This lecture is co-sponsored by MIT Computational and Systems Biology,
the Friends of Ashdown House, and the Laboratory for Computer Science.
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