Latest News from: Santa Fe Institute

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Released: 13-Jul-2017 4:10 PM EDT
Live Stream: Santa Fe Institute Broadcasts First Interplanetary Panel Discussion
Santa Fe Institute

What will it take to become an InterPlanetary civilization? The Santa Fe Institute convenes a panel of scientists and sci-fi authors to answer this question Tuesday, July 18 at 7:30 p.m. MDT. Watch the discussion live on YouTube.

Released: 6-Jun-2017 11:05 AM EDT
How Neurons Use Crowdsourcing to Make Decisions
Santa Fe Institute

When many individual neurons collect data, how do they reach a unanimous decision? New research from the Santa Fe Institute's collective computation group suggests a two-phase process.

   
Released: 9-May-2017 11:05 AM EDT
Aging Gracefully in the Rainforest
Santa Fe Institute

In an article that appears in the current issue of Evolutionary Anthropology, researchers synthesize over 15 years of theoretical and empirical findings from long-term study of the Tsimane forager-farmers. They find productivity and social status peak long after physical strength.

1-May-2017 3:00 PM EDT
Cities Provide Paths From Poverty to Sustainability
Santa Fe Institute

Understanding how cities develop at the neighborhood level is key to promoting equitable, sustainable urbanization.

Released: 24-Apr-2017 2:05 PM EDT
Citizens Can Productively Change Politics by Taking the Law to Court
Santa Fe Institute

When public goods like clean water, air, and health care compete with funding for particular districts, citizen lawsuits can tilt the legislative process toward a middle ground.

Released: 22-Mar-2017 11:20 AM EDT
What's Cuing Salmon Migration Patterns?
Santa Fe Institute

Why do salmon travel in pulse-like groups? A new model challenges standard explanations by suggesting social cues trigger migration.

Released: 15-Feb-2017 11:05 AM EST
Researchers Look for Life's Lower Limits
Santa Fe Institute

Investigating the lower bound of energy required for life helps us understand ecological constraints on other planetary bodies in our solar system as well as our own. In a new study, researchers analyze cellular processes across species and sizes of bacteria, to zoom in on life's minimal energy requirements.

Released: 6-Dec-2016 11:05 AM EST
Predicting Unpredictability: Information Theory Offers New Way to Read Ice Cores
Santa Fe Institute

A new technique based in information theory promises to improve researchers' ability to interpret ice core samples and our understanding of the earth's climate history.

Released: 1-Dec-2016 11:05 AM EST
A Friend of a Friend Is…a Dense Network
Santa Fe Institute

Networks evolve in different ways depending how often "second neighbor," or friends of friends, connections occur.

Released: 30-Nov-2016 5:05 PM EST
Suggestions for You: A Better, Faster Recommendation Algorithm
Santa Fe Institute

Researchers suggest a better algorithm for digital recommendation systems that suggest songs, movies, or romantic partners for you.

Released: 11-Oct-2016 11:05 AM EDT
Study: When a Group Must Solve Hard Problems, It's Best to Design the Team Around Its Learning Style
Santa Fe Institute

What is the best way for a group to collaborate on solving a difficult problem? A new study finds that the answer depends on how that particular group learns.

Released: 11-Oct-2016 11:05 AM EDT
Study: Medieval Cities Not So Different From Modern European Cities
Santa Fe Institute

Modern European cities and medieval cities share a population-density-to-area relationship, a new paper concludes – the latest research to find regularities in human settlement patterns across space and time.

Released: 18-Aug-2016 6:05 PM EDT
Powerful New Metric Quickly Reveals Network Structure at Multiple Scales
Santa Fe Institute

Three researchers have devised a new network community detection technique that hopscotches over the limitations of other methods, revealing network structure at the microscopic, mesoscopic, and macroscopic levels quickly and simultaneously.

Released: 1-Aug-2016 2:05 PM EDT
Replacing Ill Workers with Healthy Ones Accelerates Some Epidemics
Santa Fe Institute

When disease outbreaks occur, front-line workers become infected and healthy individuals take their places. Based on network models of this “human exchange,” researchers from the Santa Fe Institute and the University of Vermont find that replacing sick individuals with healthy ones can actually accelerate the spread of infection.

Released: 27-Jul-2016 12:05 PM EDT
Religious Actions Convey Prosocial Intent, Finds Study
Santa Fe Institute

A new study suggests that people who participate in regular religious acts send a clear signal to others that they're ready and willing to contribute to their communities.

Released: 28-Jun-2016 4:05 PM EDT
Don't Abandon National Referendums, but Smaller Groups Often Make Wiser Choices
Santa Fe Institute

New research suggests that larger crowds do not always produce wiser decisions. Moderately-sized crowds are likely to outperform larger ones when faced with combinations of easy and difficult qualitative decisions.

Released: 24-Feb-2016 11:05 AM EST
Bluebird’s Conundrum: Shack Up Now or Hang Out in Mom’s Nest for a While?
Santa Fe Institute

Young male bluebirds may gain an evolutionary advantage by delaying breeding and helping out their parents' nests instead, according to new research led by Caitlin Stern of the Santa Fe Institute.

Released: 17-Feb-2016 1:05 PM EST
How Hunter-Gatherers Preserved Their Food Sources
Santa Fe Institute

New research explores the impact of hunter-gatherers on north Pacific marine food webs and the behaviors that helped preserve their network of food sources. The findings hold implications for modern food webs.

1-Feb-2016 9:00 AM EST
Semantically Speaking: Does Meaning Structure Unite Languages?
Santa Fe Institute

Using a new methodology that measures how closely words’ meanings are related within and between languages, an international team of researchers has revealed that for many universal concepts, the world’s languages feature a common structure of semantic relatedness.

Released: 28-Jan-2016 1:05 PM EST
How to Make Slums More Resilient to Climate Change
Santa Fe Institute

A team from the Santa Fe Institute, Arizona State University, and Slum Dwellers International has been selected to find new ways to help the world's poorest, most vulnerable communities.



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