Roles of heterogeneity in non-equilibrium collective dynamics
(RHINO 2020)
August 18 (Tue), 2020 ~ August 20 (Thu), 2020
■ Program
    A regular talk: 20 minutes + 10 minutes for discussion.
    An ignite talk: 5 minutes + free discussion at the end of the session




    August 18 (Tue)

    Organizers meeting (18:00~20:00)

    

    



    August 19 (Wed)

    Opening remarks (08:50~09:00)

    Session I (09:00~10:30, Chair: Hyeong-Chai Jeong)
       Sang Hoon Lee (Gyeongnam National University of Science and Technology)
             Structural inequality and polarization in collaborative knowledge and opinion formation (abstract)
       Yukie Sano (University of Tsukuba)
             The recent changes in social media under the influence of COVID-19 (abstract)
       Kousuke Yakubo (Hokkaido University)
             A General Model of Fractal Scale-Free Networks (abstract)

    Ignite-talk Session (10:40~12:00, Chair: Seung-Woo Son)
       Fumiko Ogushi (Osaka University) Frequent flip-flop of lipids in bilayer membrane
       Nobuyasu Ito (RIKEN) Simulation challenge to covid19 spread
       Youngjai Park (Hanyang University) Diversity in an evolving open system with Lotka-Volterra dynamics

       Deok-Sun Lee (Inha University) Local export share distribution across countries and products (abstract)
       Yohsuke Murase (RIKEN) Five rules for friendly rivalry in direct reciprocity (abstract)
       Toru Ohira (Nagoya University) How do you ask minimal questions to find out relations
       Hang-Hyun Jo (The Catholic University of Korea) Burst-tree decomposition for time series analysis (abstract)

    Session II (14:00~15:30, Chair: Cheol-Min Ghim)
       Junghyo Jo (Seoul National University)
             Causality inference from time series data
       Takashi Shimada (University of Tokyo)
             Is Lotka-Volterra dynamics applicable for human contact? (Does Betteridge's law hold again here?)
       Fuhito Kojima (Stanford University)
             Open problems in "economics of matching and market design," and how supercomputers can help (abstract)

    Session III (15:40~17:10, Chair: Woo-Sung Jung)
       Hiraku Nishimori (Meiji University)
             On Autonomous Workload Compensation in Ant Colonies II
       Hye Jin Park (APCTP)
             Why is cyclic dominance so rare? (abstract)
       Tae-Soo Chon (Ecology and Future Research Association)
             Individual-Based and Spatially Explicit Models Applied to Pest Population Dynamics (abstract)

    Closing remarks (17:10~17:20)




    August 20 (Thu)

    Discussion (10:00~12:00)