JFFoS Symposium - FoS
Transcription
JFFoS Symposium - FoS
Centre Pompidou-Metz, 2010 © Shigeru Ban Architects Europe et Jean de Gastines Architectes - Photo Philippe Gisselbrecht Eighth French-Japanese Frontiers of Science JFFoS Symposium January 23-27, 2014 Metz, France Eighth French-Japanese Frontiers of Science JFFoS Symposium January 23-27, 2014 - Metz, France CONTENTS CONSORTIUM PRESENTATION............................................................................................. 7 SYMPOSIUM PROGRAM....................................................................................................... 9 LIST OF JAPANESE OFFICIAL DELEGATES.......................................................................... 14 LIST OF FRENCH OFFICIAL DELEGATES............................................................................. 15 LIST OF JAPANESE PARTICIPANTS.................................................................................... 16 LIST OF FRENCH PARTICIPANTS........................................................................................ 18 PHOTOS OF PARTICIPANTS................................................................................................ 20 SESSION ABSTRACTS Session I: Chemistry......................................................................................................... MATSUURA Tomoaki TOYOTA Taro DANGER Grégoire Session II: Materials Science ........................................................................................... DUJARDIN Erik CORAUX Johann SHIRAISHI Masashi Session III: Earth Science/Environment .......................................................................... KATO Aitaro GOTO Hiroyuki SCHUBNEL Alexandre Session IV: Mathematics/Informatics .............................................................................. IMOTO Seiya OHNISHI Toshio BLUM Michael Session V: Physics and Astrophysics ............................................................................... JOSSERAND Christophe GUERLIN Christine TAKAHASHI Daisuke Session VI: Life/Medical Science ..................................................................................... DEROCHE-GAMONET Véronique MALLET Luc TAKAHASHI Hidehiko Session VII: Social Sciences/Humanities ......................................................................... ETCHEGARAY Claire BACACHE-BEAUVALLET Maya KURATA Takashi 3 25 31 37 45 51 57 65 CURRICULUM VITAE (alphabetical order) ........................................................... 73 A ALDAKOV Dmitry.................................................................................................................. 74 AMBROISE Christophe......................................................................................................... 75 APOSTOLUK Alexandra......................................................................................................... 76 ASHIHARA Satoshi............................................................................................................... 78 AUCOUTURIER Jean-Julien.................................................................................................. 79 B BACACHE-BEAUVALLET Maya.............................................................................................. 80 BAUNEZ Christelle................................................................................................................ 81 BECK Pierre......................................................................................................................... 83 BLUM Michael..................................................................................................................... 85 BURGUET Jasmine............................................................................................................... 86 C CELZARD Alain..................................................................................................................... 88 CORAUX Johann.................................................................................................................. 89 D DANGER Grégoire................................................................................................................ 90 DEROCHE-GAMONET Véronique........................................................................................... 91 DUJARDIN Erik..................................................................................................................... 92 DUVERNAY Fabrice............................................................................................................... 93 E ETCHEGARAY Claire............................................................................................................. 94 F FAVE Alain............................................................................................................................ 95 FUJI Nobuaki....................................................................................................................... 96 FUJII Jun............................................................................................................................. 97 G GOTO Hiroyuki..................................................................................................................... 98 GOTO Masataka................................................................................................................... 99 GUERLIN Christine............................................................................................................. 101 H HENNEBELLE Patrick......................................................................................................... 102 HIRAHARA Toru.................................................................................................................. 103 HIRATA Satoshi.................................................................................................................. 105 HISHIKAWA Akiyoshi.......................................................................................................... 106 HITOSUGI Taro................................................................................................................... 107 HOQUET Thierry................................................................................................................. 108 I IMOTO Seiya...................................................................................................................... 109 J JOLY-POTTUZ Lucile.......................................................................................................... 110 JOSSERAND Christophe..................................................................................................... 112 4 K KATO Aitaro........................................................................................................................ 113 KERENIDIS Iordanis............................................................................................................ 114 KINOSHITA Chika............................................................................................................... 116 KITA Masaki....................................................................................................................... 117 KITABA Ikuko..................................................................................................................... 119 KURATA Takashi................................................................................................................. 121 M MALLET Luc...................................................................................................................... 122 MASAOKA Shigeyuki.......................................................................................................... 123 MATSUDA Tetsuya.............................................................................................................. 124 MATSUMOTO Mitsuo.......................................................................................................... 125 MATSUURA Tomoaki.......................................................................................................... 126 MIHARA Satoshi................................................................................................................. 127 MURAKAMI Shuichi............................................................................................................ 128 N NARUSE Makoto................................................................................................................ 129 NIIKURA Hiromichi............................................................................................................. 130 O OBERTELLI Alexandre........................................................................................................ 131 OHNISHI Toshio.................................................................................................................. 132 OHSUGI Miho..................................................................................................................... 133 OTAKE Tsubasa.................................................................................................................. 134 PéTRéLIS François............................................................................................................. 136 Q QUERLIOZ Damien............................................................................................................ 137 R RAPENNE Gwénaël............................................................................................................ 138 RENARD Vincent................................................................................................................ 140 S SAHRAOUI Halima.............................................................................................................. 141 SANO Mayuko.................................................................................................................... 143 SCHUBNEL Alexandre........................................................................................................ 144 SHIMODAIRA Hidetoshi...................................................................................................... 145 SHIRAISHI Masashi............................................................................................................ 146 T TAKAHASHI Daisuke........................................................................................................... 147 TAKAHASHI Hidehiko.......................................................................................................... 148 TOGAWA Yoshihiko............................................................................................................. 149 TOURNAT Vincent............................................................................................................... 151 TOYOTA Taro...................................................................................................................... 152 TROLEZ Yann..................................................................................................................... 153 U UTSUNOMIYA Shoko.......................................................................................................... 155 5 V VUILLERME Nicolas............................................................................................................ 157 Y YAMASHITA Katsuyuki........................................................................................................159 YOSHIDA Ryo.....................................................................................................................161 ANNEXES ........................................................................................................................ 163 DISCOVER METZ ACCESS TO SYMPOSIUM VENUE 6 the french frontiers of science and engineering consortium THE FRENCH FRONTIERS OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING CONSORTIUM Since September 2009, a new organization has been set up to manage and coordinate all the FoS and FoE programs. A group constituted with the ministries and the major French scientific institutions has created a consortium acting as2009, a steering committee and has created a set unitup devoted to theand logistics of the all symposia. There Since a been coordinate the Since September September 2009, a new new organization organization has been set up to to manage manage and coordinate all the FoS FoS areand two types of partnerships : and FoE FoE programs. programs. A A group group constituted constituted with with the the ministries ministries and and the the major major French French scientific scientific institutions institutions has has created created a a consortium consortium acting acting as as a a steering steering committee committee and and created created a a unit unit devoted devoted to to the logistics of the symposia. There are two types of partnerships: the logistics of the symposia. There are two types of partnerships: The “principal partners” in charge of one or more FoS or FoE programs : The “principal partners” in charge of one or more FoS or FoE programs: The “principal partners” in charge of one FoS or FoE programs: • Ministère de l’Enseignement supérieur et deorlamore recherche • Ministère des Affaires étrangères •• Ministère de supérieur Ministère de l’Enseignement l’Enseignement supérieur et et de de la la recherche recherche •• Ministère des Affaires étrangères • Centre national de la recherche scientifique Ministère des Affaires étrangères •• Centre de la scientifique Centre national dedes la recherche recherche scientifique • Conférence desnational directeurs écoles françaises d’ingénieurs •• Conférence des directeurs des écoles Conférence des directeurs françaises d’ingénieurs d’ingénieurs • Commissariat à l’énergie atomique des écoles françaises •• Commissariat Commissariat à à l’énergie l’énergie atomique atomique The “associated partners” in charge of the common expenses to all programs (FoS unit, communication) : The “associated “associated partners” partners” in in charge charge of of the the common common expenses expenses to to all all programs programs (FoS (FoS unit, unit, The communication): communication): • Institut national de la santé et de la recherche médicale • Institut national de la recherche en informatique et en automatique •• •• Institut national national de de la la santé santé et et de de la la recherche recherche médicale médicale Institut Institut national de la recherche en informatique et en en automatique automatique Institut national de la recherche en informatique et 7 7 7 Symposium Program 8 Japanese-French Frontiers of Sciences Symposium France - January 23 - 27, 2014 th Thursday, January 23, 2014 05:25 - 10:00 10:30 - 12:00 12:30 - 13:30 14:00 14:00 - 18:30 17:00 - 18:30 18:30 - 19:00 19:00 - 19:30 19:30 - 21:00 Shuttle bus (group 1) between Frankfurt and Metz Check in and registration (group 1) Lunch Japanese participants Japanese participants Japanese participants French staff Check in and registration French participants Shuttle bus (group 2) between Frankfurt Japanese participants and Metz Session coordination meeting PGM, Chairs, Speakers and staffs Check in and registration (group 2) Japanese participants Opening ceremony Emmanuelle PLATZGUMMER Ministry of foreign affairs Yoichi NAKATANI All participants Director, JSPS Strasbourg Office Catherine BASTIEN-VENTURA CNRS Hidetoshi SHIMODAIRA & Christelle BAUNEZ Co-Chairs Welcome dinner All participants 9 Symposium Program 8 Japanese-French Frontiers of Sciences Symposium France - January 23 - 27, 2014 th Friday, January 24, 2014 07:00 - 09:00 Breakfast Session I Chemistry Chemistry of "Origins of Life" 1 9:30 - 10:30 PGM: Akiyoshi HISHIKAWA & Gwénaël RAPENNE General discussion Session I 10:30 - 11:30 11:45 - 13:00 13:00 - 14:00 14:00 - 15:00 15:00 - 16:00 16:00 - 17:00 17:00 - 18:00 18:00 - 19:00 19:30 - 22:00 Lunch Session II Materials Science Graphene, the “miracle material” PGM: Taro HITOSUGI & Alain FAVE General discussion Session II Flash Poster Talks (Session I to VII) Poster Session I during coffee break (Session I, II, II) Session III Earth Science/Environment Earthquakes and Associated Risks All participants Chair (Japan) Tomoaki MATSUURA Speaker (France) Grégoire DANGER Speaker (Japan) Taro TOYOTA All participants All participants Chair (France) Erik DUJARDIN Speaker (Japan) Masashi SHIRAISHI Speaker (France) Johann CORAUX All participants General participants All participants Chair (Japan) Aitaro KATO Speaker (France) PGM: Katsuyuki YAMASHITA & Pierre BECK Alexandre SCHUBNEL Speaker (Japan) General discussion Session III Hiroyuki GOTO All participants Cocktail and Gala dinner Philippe LEROY President, Moselle Developpement Raymond NEITER President ISEETECH All participants Shigeo KOYASU JSPS Advisory Board of FoS Symposium Patrick NEDELLEC International Relations Office CNRS Ichiro IKEDA Scientific counselor Japanese Ambassy - TBC 1. For each session there is a 20 ‘ presentation from the Chair and 2 x 20 ‘ presentations from the Speakers, followed by 1 hour discussion. 10 Symposium Program 8 Japanese-French Frontiers of Sciences Symposium France - January 23 - 27, 2014 th Saturday, January 25, 2014 07:00 - 09:00 Breakfast Session IV Mathematics / Informatics Bayesian Statistics 9:00 - 10:00 10:00 - 11:00 11:00 -12:30 11:00 - 13:00 12:30 -13:45 14:00 - 16:15 16:30 - 17:00 17:00 - 18:00 18:00 - 19:00 19:00 - 20:00 20:00 - 21:30 PGM: Hidetoshi SHIMODAIRA & Chistophe AMBROISE General discussion Session IV Poster session II during coffee break (Session IV, V,VI,VII) PGM Meeting for the 9th JFFoS (Part 1) Lunch Cultural Tour and group photo Visit of the Centre Pompidou - Metz Coffee break Session V Physics and Astrophysics Supersolidity and quantum plasticity All participants Chair (Japan) Seiya IMOTO Speaker (France) Michael BLUM Speaker (Japan) Toshio OHNISHI All participants All participants PGMs and staffs All participants All participants All participants Chair (France) Christophe JOSSERAND Speaker (Japan) PGM: Satoshi MIHARA & François PÉTRÉLIS Daisuke TAKAHASHI Speaker (France) Christine GUERIN General discussion Session V All participants PGM Meeting for the 9th JFFoS (Part 2) PGMs and staffs Dinner All participants 11 Symposium Program 8 Japanese-French Frontiers of Sciences Symposium France - January 23 - 27, 2014 th Sunday, January 26, 2014 07:00 - 08:00 08:00 - 09:00 09:00 - 10:00 10:00 -10:30 10:30 -11:30 11:30 - 12:30 12:30- 13:00 13:00 -14:30 15:00 - 17:00 19:00 - 20:30 20:30 Breakfast2 All participants Session VI Life / Medical Science Chair (France) Psychiatric disorders: definitions and treatments Véronique DEROCHE-GAMONET Speaker (Japan) PGM: Miho OHSUGI & Christelle BAUNEZ Hidehiko TAKAHASHI Speaker (France) General discussion session VI Luc MALLET All participants Coffee Break All participants Speaker (France) Session VII Social Sciences / Humanities Claire ETCHEGARAY Happiness Speaker (Japan) Takashi KURATA PGM : Mayuko SANO & Thierry HOQUET Speaker (France) Maya BACACHE-BEAUVALLET General discussion session VII All participants Closing session Marc MELKA Ministry of research Yuko FUJIGAKI JSPS Advisory Board of FoS Symposium Program Hidetoshi SHIMODAIRA & Christelle BAUNEZ Co-Chairs Farewell Lunch Visit of Metz or free time Dinner All participants All participants Japanese Participants Japanese participants and French staff “Checkout” of Japanese Participants (group 1) Japanese Participants because of early departure on Monday 27 2. Check out for the French Participants before 12 :00 12 Symposium Program 8 Japanese-French Frontiers of Sciences Symposium France - January 23 - 27, 2014 th Monday, January 27, 2014 06:00 - 10:30 07:00 - 09:00 Before 12:00 12:00-14:00 14:30 - 18H00 Shuttle bus (group 1) between Metz and Frankfurt Japanese participants Breakfast Japanese participants and French staff Checkout” and departure of Japanese Japanese participants Participants (group 2) Free lunch Japanese participants Shuttle bus (group 2) between Metz and Frankfurt Japanese participants 13 List of japanese official Delegates (alphabetical order) Prof. Yuko FUJIGAKI – JSPS* FoS Symposium Advisory Board • The University of Tokyo • Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Akiko FUJITA - JSPS • Frontiers of Science Symposium, • Research Cooperation Division, Staff Shigeo KOYASU - JSPS FoS Symposium Advisory Board • Group Director • RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences (IMS) • Laboratory for Immune Cell System Yoichi NAKATANI - JSPS Strasbourg Office • Director Prof. Masayuki NUMAO - JSPS FoS Symposium Advisory Board • Osaka University • The Institute of Scientific and Industrial Research Mai SUGAWA - JSPS • Frontiers of Science Symposium, • Research Cooperation Division, Staff Satoko TADA - JSPS • Section Chief, Frontiers of Science Symposium, • Research Cooperation Division Prof. Tohru YOSHIHISA - JSPS FoS Symposium Advisory Board • University of Hyogo, • Graduate School of Life Science *Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Frontiers of Science Symposium Research Cooperation Division International Program Department, 5-3-1 Kojimachi, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 102-0083, Japan TEL: +81-3-3263-1844, 1725 - FAX: +81-3-3234-3700 E-mail: [email protected] 14 List of French official Delegates (alphabetical order) Catherine BASTIEN-VENTURA • CNRS • Europe of Research and International Cooperation Office • French Frontiers of Sciences and Engineering Programs, Director Dominique CHATTON • Ministry of Higher Education and Research • European and International Relations and Cooperation Office (DREIC) • Department of Asian & African Affairs – Program manager in charge of Scientific Affairs Sylviane MARAIS • CNRS • Europe of Research and International Cooperation Office • French Frontiers of Sciences and Engineering Programs, Assistant Marc MELKA • Ministry of Higher Education and Research • European and International Relations and Cooperation Office (DREIC) • Department of Asian & African Affairs, Director Patrick NEDELLEC • CNRS • Europe of Research and International Cooperation Office, Director Emmanuelle PLATZGUMMER • Ministry of Foreign Affairs • Research and Scientific exchanges Department 15 LIST OF JAPANESE PARTICIPANTS (session order) Session I - Chemistry PGM Akiyoshi HISHIKAWA Chair Tomoaki MATSUURA SP Taro TOYOTA GP Shigeyuki MASAOKA GP Satoshi ASHIHARA Graduate School of Science, Nagoya University Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo Institute for Molecular Science Department of Applied Physics, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology Session II - Materials Science PGM Taro HITOSUGI SP Masashi SHIRAISHI GP Yoshihiko TOGAWA GP Shuichi MURAKAMI GP Toru HIRAHARA Advanced Institute for Materials Research, Tohoku University Graduate School of Engineering, Kyoto University Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Research Center, Research Institutes for the Twenty First Century, Osaka Prefecture University Department of Physics, Tokyo Institute of Technology Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo Session III - Earth Science /Environment PGM Katsuyuki YAMASHITA Chair Aitaro KATO SP Hiroyuki GOTO GP Tsubasa OTAKE GP Ikuko KITABA Graduate School of Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University Earthquake Research Institute, The University of Tokyo Disaster Prevention Research Institute, Kyoto University Faculty of Engineering, Hokkaido University Research Center for Inland Seas, Kobe University Session IV - Mathematics/Informatics PGM Hidetoshi SHIMODAIRA Chair Seiya IMOTO SP Toshio OHNISHI GP Masataka GOTO GP Ryo YOSHIDA Graduate School of Engineering Science, Osaka University The Institute of Medical Science, The University of Tokyo Faculty of Economics, Kyushu University Information Technology Research Institute (ITRI), National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) Department of Statistical Modeling, The Institute of Statistical Mathematics, Research Organization of Information and Systems Session V - Physics and Astrophysics PGM Satoshi MIHARA Institute of Particle and Nuclear Studies, High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) SP Daisuke TAKAHASHI Division of General Education, Ashikaga Institute of Technology GP Hiromichi NIIKURA School of Advanced Science and Engineering, Waseda University GP Makoto NARUSE Photonic Network Research Institute, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology GP Shoko UTSUNOMIYA Principles of Informatics Research Division, National Institute of Informatics 16 LIST OF JAPANESE PARTICIPANTS (session order) Session VI - Life/Medical Science PGM SP GP GP GP Miho OHSUGI Hidehiko TAKAHASHI Tetsuya MATSUDA Masaki KITA Satoshi HIRATA Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto University Brain Science Institute, Tamagawa University Faculty of Pure and Applied Sciences, University of Tsukuba Wildlife Research Center, Kyoto University Session VII - Social Sciences/Humanities PGM Mayuko SANO SP Takashi KURATA GP Mitsuo MATSUMOTO GP Chika KINOSHITA GP Jun FUJII International Research Center for Japanese Studies, National Institutes for the Humanities Research Institute for Humanity and Nature (RIHN), National Institutes for the Humanities Osaka School of International Public Policy, Osaka University Graduate School of Humanities, Tokyo Metropolitan University Faculty of Buddhism, Komazawa University 17 LIST OF french PARTICIPANTS (session order) Session I - Chemistry PGM Gwenael RAPENNE SP Grégoire DANGER GP Dmitry ALDAKOV GP Fabrice DUVERNAY GP Vincent RENARD Groupe NanoSciences CEMES UPR 8011 CNRS Ionic and molecular interactions physics laboratory (P2IM) UMR CNRS 7345 INAC/SPrAM/LEMOH (UMR-5819) CEA-Grenoble Physique des interactions ioniques et moléculaires (P2IM) UMR CNRS 7345 CEA/INAC/SPSMS/Lateqs CEA Grenoble Session II - Materials Science PGM Alain FAVE Chair Erik DUJARDIN SP Johann CORAUX GP Alexandra APOSTOLUK GP Vincent TOURNAT Institut des Nanotechnologies de Lyon (INL) Groupe Nanosciences - PicoLab - Centre d'élaboration de matériaux et d'études structurales (CEMES) / CNRS UPR 8011 Neel Institute UPR 2940 Hybrid systems at low dimension Institut des Nanotechnologies de Lyon (INL) Laboratoire d'Acoustique de l'Université du Maine (LAUM) UMR 6613) Session III - Earth Science /Environment PGM SP GP GP GP Pierre BECK Alexandre SCHUBNEL Yann TROLEZ Alain CELZARD Nobuaki FUJI Planetology and Astrophysics Institute (IPAG). Laboratoire de Géologie - ENS Institut des Sciences Chimiques de Rennes (ISCR) UMR 6226 Institut Jean Lamour (IJL) UMR 7198 Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris Session IV - Mathematics/Informatics PGM Christophe AMBROISE SP Michael BLUM GP Jasmine BURGUET GP Iordanis KERENIDIS GP Damien QUERLIOZ Laboratoire Statistique & Génome, UMR 8071 CNRS UMR5525 Techniques de l'Ingénierie Médicale et de la Complexité - Informatique, Mathématiques et Applications de Grenoble (TIMC-IMAG) Institut Jean-Pierre Bourgin, INRA Laboratoire d'Informatique Algorithmique : Fondements et Applications - UMR 7089 LIAFA, CNRS/Université Paris 7 Institut d'Electronique Fondamentale (Orsay), CNRS Session V - Physics and Astrophysics PGM François PÉTRÉLIS Chair Christophe JOSSERAND SP Christine GUERLIN GP Patrick HENNEBELLE GP Alexandre OBERTELLI Laboratoire de Physique Statistique Ecole Normale Supérieure Institut Jean Le Rond d'Alembert- UMR 7190 UPMC - LKB Paris Laboratoire Service Astrophysique, CEA Service de Physique nucléaire, CEA Saclay 18 LIST OF french PARTICIPANTS (session order) Session VI - Life/Medical Science PGM Christelle BAUNEZ Chair Véronique DEROCHE-GAMONET SP Luc MALLET GP Nicolas VUILLERME GP Lucile JOLY-POTTUZ UMR 7289 Institut des Neurosciences de la Timone Université d'Aix Marseille Psychobiology of addiction NeuroCentre Magendie (NCM) CRIU 862 Brain and Spine Institute - Pitié Salpétrière Hospital UMR 7225 GEM (Gerontechnology, E-health and Modelisation), AGIM laboratory, FRE 3405, Université Grenoble I Elyt lab (Engineering and science Lyon Tohoku Laboratory) INSA de Lyon Session VII - Social Sciences/Humanities PGM Thierry HOQUET Chair Claire ETCHEGARAY SP Maya BACACHE-BEAUVALLET GP Jean-Julien AUCOUTURIER GP Halima SAHRAOUI Laboratory EA 4187-Institut de Recherches Philosophiques de Lyon (IRPHIL) Department of Philosophy Paris-Ouest Nanterre La Défense Département de Sciences Sociales-Cepremap PSE IRCAM STMS UMR 9912 URI OCTOGONE-Lordat EA 4156, Université Toulouse 2 19 PHOTOS OF PARTICIPANTS (session order) SESSION I Chemistry/ Dmitry Satoshi GrégoireFabrice Akiyoshi ALDAKOV ashihara DANGER DUVERNAYHISHIKAWA Shigeyuki Tomoaki Gwénaël Vincent Taro MASAOKAMATSUURArapenneRENARDTOYOTA SESSION II Materials/ Science AlexandraJohann Erik Alain Toru APOSTOLUkCORAUX DUJARDIN FAVE HIRAHARA Taro HITOSUGI Shuichi Masashi Yoshihiko Vincent MURAKAMISHIRAISHI TOGAWA TOURNAT 20 PHOTOS OF PARTICIPANTS (session order) SESSION III Earth Science/ Environment Pierre Alain NobuakiHiroyuki Aitaro BECKCELZARD FUJI GOTO KATO Ikuko TsubasaAlexandre Yann Katsuyuki KITABA OTAKE SCHUBNELTROLEZ YAMASHITA SESSION IV Mathematics/ Informatics ChristopheMichäel ambroise BLUM Iordanis KERENIDIS Jasmine BURGUET Masataka GOTO Seiya imoto Toshio Damien Hidetoshi Ryo OHNISHIQUERLIOZ shimodairaYOSHIDA 21 PHOTOS OF PARTICIPANTS (session order) SESSION V Physics and Astrophysics Christine Patrick ChristopheSatoshi Makoto GUERLINHENNEBELLE JOSSERANDMIHARA NARUSE Hiromichi Alexandre NIIKURAOBERTELLI François PÉTRÉLIS Daisuke Shoko TAKAHASHIUTSUNOMIYA Session VI Life/ Medical science ChristelleVéronique Satoshi Lucile BAUNEZDEROCHE-GAMONET HIRATA JOLY-POTTUZ Masaki KITA Luc Tetsuya Miho HidehikoNicolas MALLET MATSUDA OHSUGI TAKAHASHIVUILLERME 22 PHOTOS OF PARTICIPANTS (session order) SESSION VII Social Sciences/ Humanities Jean-JulienMaya Claire Jun Thierry AUCOUTURIER BACACHE-BEAUVALLET etchegarayFUJII HOQUET Chika KINOSHITA Takashi KURATA Mitsuo Halima Mayuko MATSUMOTOSAHRAOUI SANO 23 SESSION I SESSION Field CHEMISTRY SESSION TITLE Chemistry of "Origins of Life" 25 SESSION I Chemistry Chemistry of "Origins of Life" Chair: Tomoaki MATSUURA Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University It remains unclear, where and how the first living matter (i.e., life) begins. We have learned from the fossil records the existence of dinosaurs and other mysterious creatures, but there are no records about the first living matters that is believed to have emerged about 3.9 billion years ago. Under such circumstances, synthesizing molecules constituting the cell, molecular systems, and ultimately the entire cell only from defined components and under defined conditions is one of the strategies to gain insight into the origin of life (Szostak, Bartel and Luisi, Nature, 2001). “Origin of life” can be classified into two different levels. The first is the origin of biological molecules, such as the amino acids, nucleotides, and lipids from non-biological molecules. Early Earth is likely to have had only simple chemicals such as methane, ammonia and hydrogen. How can the biological molecules emerge? Urey and Miller performed a chemical synthesis in a possible primitive Earth condition, and found that amino acids can be synthesized (Science, 1953). As such, synthesizing biological molecules and/or identifying conditions that enable their synthesis will give insight into the origin of biological molecules. Dr. Danger will present the topic related to the origin of biological molecules. The second level is the origin of the molecular system. Molecules per se are necessary but not sufficient for life. If we observe a mixture of components from disrupted Escherichia coli containing all the molecules originally present, no spontaneous regeneration of living cells takes place. Molecules must be coordinated in the correct order to form a molecular system that exhibits properties of a living cell. However, it is often difficult to artificially synthesize or construct such molecular systems. Accordingly, synthesizing molecular systems that exhibit cell-like properties and identifying conditions to synthesize such system will give insight into the origin of such molecular system. Dr. Toyota will present the topic related to the origin of molecular system exhibiting a cell-like behavior. One of the ultimate goals in the field of origin of life is to synthesize an artificial cell, one of the most complex molecular systems. When this is achieved, it shows one possible route for the origin of cell, i.e., emergence of livings from non-living materials. In this session, the significance and the impact of research on the artificial cell assembly will also be discussed. Speaker: Taro TOYOTA The University of Tokyo I - Closed boundary composed of amphiphilic molecules At the prebiotic era of the Earth, the emergence of a closed boundary composed of organic molecules was inevitable for the birth of the common ancestor of living cells. The living cells commonly have closed membranes made of lipid binding phosphate, i.e. phospholipid. Like detergents, phospholipids are categorized to amphiphilic molecules (called as amphiphiles) which have both the water-soluble part (phosphate) and the water-insoluble one (lipid). Moreover, phospholipids can form closed membrane in water with no assistance of 26 DNA or proteins. But, researchers think that the cell-originated phospholipid is too complicated to argue that it consisted in the closed boundary at the prebiotic era. So far, Prof. Nakatani and Prof. Ourisson (Louis Pasteur University) proposed a hypothetical pathway of chemical evolution of a phospholipid. Prof. Walde (ETH) reported that fatty acid which is simpler amphiphile than phospholipid forms closed membrane (vesicle) in water at a certain concentration and pH. Prof. Deamer (UCSC) found that fatty acid extracts from a meteorite form vesicles in water. Therefore, the closed boundary or membrane composed of simple amphiphiles has drawn much attention as a powerful model of the container for the common ancestors of living cells.[1] II - Design of molecular system realizing cell-like dynamics of closed boundary of amphiphiles. How does the closed boundary of amphiphiles show cell-like dynamics linked to their metabolic reactions? This question is significant and incentive for not only the issue on origins of living cells but also supramolecular chemistry and soft matter physics. To approach this question, we have focused on designing ad hoc molecular systems where the closed boundary of amphiphiles shows the cell-like dynamics. The amphiphiles consisting in our molecular systems are designed based on the two aspects: the structure of the water-soluble part and the chemical reaction of the water-insoluble part. According to Kunitake’s reports that artificial amphiphiles containing ammonium ions as the water-soluble part forms closed membrane in water,[2] we adopted this water-soluble part because several sorts of phospholipids contain ammonium ions. Maillard reaction is one of the nonenzymatic chemical reactions which are expected to be involved in origin of life.[3] We thus installed the essence of Maillard reaction into the water-insoluble part of the amphiphile. Using such synthesized amphiphiles, we realized growth and self-division dynamics of vesicles and self-propelled motion of amphiphile-oil complex droplets.[4,5] Addition of reactive amphiphiles to produce the component molecules of vesicles, micrometer-sized vesicles containing an amphiphilic catalyst repeatedly grew and self-divided under a microscope. In the case of amphiphile-oil complex droplets which have micrometer scale diameters, they exhibited the self-propelled motion and chemotaxis behavior to the added amphiphiles. III - Constructive approaches for issue on origin of living cells. The constructive approach for origins of living cells is successfully progressing with the development of the closed boundaries of amphiphiles and the analysis on their dynamics. The merit of this approach to the origins of life is that all component molecules are well defined after synthesis and purification. For example, Prof. Szostak’s group (Harvard University) and Yomo’s group (Osaka University) independently constructed the evolutionary process of informational substances using vesicles or droplets. Sugawara’s group (University of Tokyo) developed the vesicle proliferation system assisted by amplified DNA inside of the vesicles. Namely, the researchers take more interest in the next stage of the constructive approach for emergence of genotype and phenotype in origin of living cells. In the present talk, an idea bridging growth/self-division dynamics and selfpropelled motion is discussed for nonbiological acceleration of the evolutionary process based on the closed boundary of amphiphiles. IV - Conclusion The present talk briefly reviews the history of researches on the closed boundary of amphiphiles and ad hoc molecular systems exhibiting cell-like dynamics. These findings contribute to a model for origins of life. Moreover, they provide a novel experimental subject for chemistry, namely, the robustness of molecular assembly in a non-equilibrium condition. V - References 1 ‘Synthesizing life’, J. W. Szostak, D. P. Bartel, P. L. Luisi, Nature, 409 (2001), 387-390. 2 ‘‘A totally synthetic bilayer membrane’, T. Kunitake, Y. Okahata, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 99 (1977), 3860-3861. 3 ‘‘Action of Amino Acids on Sugars. Formation of Melanoidins in a Methodical Way’, L. C. Maillard, Compt. Rend., 154 (1912), 66-68. 4 ‘‘Population Study of Sizes and Components of Self-Reproducing Giant Multilamellar Vesicles’, T. Toyota, K. Takakura, Y. Kageyama, K. Kurihara, N. Maru, K. Ohnuma, K. Kaneko, T. Sugawara, Langmuir, 24 (2008), 3037-3044. 5 ‘ ‘Self-Propelled Oil Droplet Consuming "Fuel" Surfactant’, T. Toyota, N. Maru, M. M. Hanczyc, T. Ikegami, T. Sugawara, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 131 (2009), 5012-5013. 27 《Chemistry of “Origins of Life”》 Glossary amino acids【アミノ酸】 is a building block of proteins. Protein is one of the most abundant molecules in the cell, and does most of the chemical reaction inside the cell, and defines the shape of the livings. タンパク質を構成する部品。タンパク質は細胞を構成する主要成分であり、化 学反応をおこすだけでなく生物の形を決める役割も果たしている。 Amphiphile: 【両親媒性分子】is a molecule which has both a water-soluble part and a water-insoluble one. 水になじむ部位と水になじまない部位を併せ持つ分子 Detergent:【洗剤】is a water-soluble cleaning agent. 洗浄の際に用いる水溶性の化合物 Escherichia coli【大腸菌】 is a bacteria found in intestine of the organisms. It is commonly used as a model organism in the laboratory. バクテリアの一種で自然界では腸内に生息する。実験生物として研究室でよく 使われている。 Lipid:【脂質】is a class of organic compounds that are fat, oil, or wax. 脂肪や油、蝋の有機化合物の総称 Maillard reaction:【メイラード反応】is a chemical reaction between an amino acid and a reducing sugar. It causes browning of food like bread. アミノ酸と還元糖との反応であり、パンなどの食品の褐色着色を引き起こす nucleotides【核酸】 is a building block of DNA that are the information molecules . DNAを構成する部品。DNAは次世代に受け継がれる物質。 Phospholipid:【リン脂質】is an organic compound combining hydrocarbons and phosphates. 炭化水素鎖とリン酸とが結合した有機化合物 Vesicle:【ベシクル】is a closed bilayer membrane composed of amphiphiles. 両親媒性分子がつくる袋状の二重膜 28 Speaker: Grégoire DANGER UMR CNRS 7345 Ionic and molecular interactions physics laboratory (P2IM) Astrochemistry Group, Team "Spectrométries et Dynamique Moléculaire", Laboratory "Physique des Interactions Ioniques et Moléculaires", UMR-CNRS 7345, Centre Saint-Jérôme, case 252, Aix-Marseille University, 13397, Marseille, France, [email protected], Group Website: http://sites.univ-provence.fr/piim/-Astrochimie-.html From interstellar medium chemistry to prebiotic chemistry: organic matter evolution toward Life? Understanding the chemical evolution of the organic matter in astrophysical environments gives us clues on the chemical composition of the organic matter that may have seeded primitive planets, and further on the origin of biochemical systems on Earth. The organic matter present in dense molecular clouds in the form of ice mantles at the surface of interstellar grains can evolve toward a complete planetary system. All along this evolution, new and more complex molecules are formed thanks to various energetic processes including UV irradiation and thermal effects. Small bodies of planetary systems (asteroids and comets) eventually serve as a reservoir of this organic matter and as vectors for its delivery at the surface of telluric planets such as the primitive Earth. Therefore, there is probably a link between the molecules contained in cometary or meteoritic grains, and the molecules present in interstellar grains of the primitive dense molecular cloud. Furthermore, at the surface of specific environment such as the primitive Earth environment, this organic matter could have taken a part in the development of a prebiotic chemistry, a chemistry that precedes the emergence of biochemical systems. During this presentation, based on experimental approaches developed in our laboratory, we will try to understand this chemical evolution and determine which chemical processes can take place in these astrophysical environments [1-4]. This will allow us to obtain a better understanding of the origin and the evolution of the matter that makes up the objects of our solar system. Finally, we develop an experimental approach for studying prebiotic chemical processes in terrestrial planets such as on the Earth [5-8]. These processes could then represent the first stage for the development of the chemistry of living organisms. [1] G. Danger, F-R. Orthous-Daunay, P. de Marcellus, P. Modica, V. Vuitton, F. Duvernay, L. Le Sergeant d’Hendecourt, R. Thissen, and T. Chiavassa, Geochimica & Cosmochimica Acta, 2013, 118, 184-201. [2] V. Vinogradoff, N. Fray, F. Duvernay, G. Briani, G. Danger, H. Cottin, P. Theulé and T. Chiavassa, Astronomy and Astrophysics, 2013, 551, A128. [3] G. Danger, F. Duvernay, P. Theulé, F. Borget, and T. Chiavassa, The Astrophysical Journal, 2012, 756,11. [4] G. Danger, F. Borget, M. Chomat, F. Duvernay, P. Theulé, J-C Guillemin, L. Le Sergeant d’Hendecourt, T. Chiavassa. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 2011, 525, A30. [5] G. Danger, A. Michaut, M. Bucchi, L. Boiteau, J. Canal, R. Plasson, and R. Pascal, Angewandte Chemie International Edition, 2013, 52, 611-614. [6] G. Danger, R. Plasson, and R. Pascal, Chemical Society Reviews, 2012, 41, 5416-5429. [7] G. Danger, R. Plasson, R. Pascal, Astrobiology 2010, 10, 651-552. [8] G. Danger, L. Boiteau, H. Cottet, R. Pascal, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2006, 128, 7412-7413. 29 SESSION II SESSION Field MATERIALS SCIENCE SESSION TITLE GRAPHENE, THE ‘’MIRACLE MATERIAL‘’ 31 SESSION II MATERIALS SCIENCE Graphene the "miracle material" Chair: Erik DUJARDIN CEMES CNRS UPR 8011, TOULOUSE, Fr. I - Introduction Graphene is a one atom-thick sheet of carbon atoms linked to each other in a honeycomb lattice. Graphite that makes pencil tips can be seen as a multiple stack of graphene sheets. For more than 25 years, graphene has been considered as a good candidate to create materials and devices with unique electronic properties. Physicists and chemists had known it for decades but It has remained elusive until André Geim et KonstantinNovoselov (Univ. Manchester, GB) isolated it and produced graphene so easily that a large community of physicists, material scientists and chemists did grab this new opportunity to actually explore, tailor and exploit the properties of graphene. Nowadays, more than 7000 new papers hare published each year (almost one per hour!). Thousands of scientists, dozens of companies around the world are scrutinizing Graphene's properties. Never before has a newly mastered material pervaded so fast into new high technology applications. II - Content of talk The two speakers of this session will address two important aspects of graphene science: (1) how to make it with a quality adapted to targeted scientific and technological objectives and (2) how to probe and master the properties of graphene, in particular its electronics properties. As an introduction, I will raise the following questions: What unique properties of graphene explain the exceptional interest this material has been attracting for a decade? What discoveries justify that so many research laboratories and companies are investing time and effort on Graphene? Will graphene be up to the challenges and promises that society, researchers, industrials and politicians associate to it? After some general contextual description of graphene, we will focus on a presentation of a brief state of the art and a list of challenges regarding the production, characterization and exploitation of graphene. III - Conclusions After this abridged overview of graphene science in 2014, the two talks will give a more in depth view of graphene synthesis and graphene physics. IV - References Graphene, a 2D dream coming true. C. Soldano, A. Mahmood, E. Dujardin. Carbon, 2010, 48, 2127-2150. Speaker: Masashi SHIRAISHI Kyoto University I - Introduction Carbon has some allotropes, for example, diamond and graphite. Diamond is loved as a costly and beautiful jewel, and it is used as a heat conductor and a cutting material in an industrial application. Graphite is known to be good at lithium intercalation and then is used as a negative electrode in a secondary ion battery. They have been studied and used in various fields, but it was thought by some people that study on carbon-related materials was comparatively out of date. However, this prejudice was suddenly broken in 1985 by a discovery 32 of nano-carbon science, and the discoverers were awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1996. After the discovery, the field of nano-carbon science has rapidly grown, and carbon nanotube of which structure is tubular and of which wall consists only of carbon hexagons, as the second family of nano-carbon materials [2]. The biggest impact in nano-carbon science comes in 2004, i.e., the discovery of graphene of fullerene, C60 [1]. Fullerene [3]. Graphene has a is a new carbon allotrope and 2-dimensional possesses a spherical strucstructure and consists ture. The discovery opened of carbon hexagons as a door for a frontier of nanocarbon nanotube has. carbon science, and the disGraphene attracts coverers were awarded the tremendous attention Nobel Prize in Chemistry in from theoretical, 1996. After the discovery, the experimental and field of nano-carbon science application-based has rapidly grown, and carbon points of views, and nanotube of which structure the Nobel Prize in is tubular and of which wall Physics was given to consists only of carbon hexathis discovery in 2010. gons, as the second family of The purpose of this nano-carbon materials [2]. The presentation is to biggest impact in nano-carbon explain why graphene science comes in 2004, i.e., is called as a miracle the discovery of graphene [3]. Fig. 1. Nano-carbon materials. material and how the Graphene has a 2-dimensiographene research will nal structure and consists of make progress. carbon hexagons as carbon nanotube has. Graphene attracts tremendous attention from theoretical, experimental and application-based points of views, and the Nobel Prize in Physics was given to this discovery in 2010. The purpose of this presentation is to explain why graphene is called as a miracle material and how the graphene research will make progress. II -isWhy is graphene a miracle material? 2. Why graphene a miracle material? ItItsounds somewhat surprising that there sounds somewhat surprising thatis relativistic there is quantum relativistic physics in graphene. Whereas the Newton equation describes the quantum physics in graphene. Whereas the Newton equation motion of matters in classical physics, the Schroedinger equadescribes the motion of matters in classical physics, the tion does inequation quantum physics. equations are equations in a Schroedinger does These in quantum physics. These 3-dimensional space. Since time and space are equivalent in relaequations are equations in a 3-dimensional space. Since time tivistic are quantum physics,inthe Schroedinger equation is replaced and space equivalent relativistic quantum physics, the by the Dirac equation, which consists of the 4(=3+1)-dimensional Schroedinger equation is replaced by the Dirac equation, which components. This equation can describe, for example, a motioncan consists of the 4(=3+1)-dimensional components. This equation of massless particles such as photons or neutrinos within sodescribe, for example, a motion of massless particles such asa photons called standard The notable is thatmodel. the motion electronsis or neutrinos withinmodel. a so-called standard Theofnotable in graphene is approximately equivalent to that of neutrinos, i.e., that the motion of electrons in graphene is approximately Fig. 2. Rapid increase of a the equation of motion for electrons in graphene is approximately equivalent to that of neutrinos, i.e., the equation of motion for number of papers related same as that of neutrinos. Relativistic quantum physics becomes electrons in graphene is approximately same as that of neutrinos. graphene (by Scopus). The apparent when a velocity of motion is close to the light velocity, Relativistic quantum physics becomes apparent when a velocity of number in 2013 is cited on and usually, a huge accelerator is necessary for investigating motion is close to the light velocity, and usually, a huge Oct. 9th. relativistic quantum physics. However, surprisingly, relativistic accelerator necessary for investigating quantum quantumisphysics apparently appears even inrelativistic a condensed matter, physics. However, surprisingly, relativistic quantum physics appears even in a condensed graphene, which is the reason why graphene is regardedapparently as a matter, graphene, which is the reason why graphene is regarded as a miracle material. miracle material. Becauseofofthe the above-mentioned reasons, tremendous attention has been garnered after Because above-mentioned reasons, tremendous attention has been garnered after 2004, and2004, a number and aofnumber scientific papers with grapheneincreased dramatically increased Fig. 2), aand for of scientificofpapers related with related graphene dramatically (see Fig. 2), and (see for example, number example, a number papers 2012, of which title includes “graphene”, ca. 7000, i.e., scientific papersof in scientific 2012, of which titleinincludes “graphene”, is ca. 7000, i.e., roughly 20ispapers per day. roughly 20 papers per day. III - Which kind of future is expected? By now, a wide variety of possible application has been proposed and investigated by using graphene: (1) 3. Which kind of future is expected? 33 By now, a wide variety of possible application has been proposed and investigated by using graphene: (1) transparent electrode [4], (2) high-frequency device [5], (3) spintronics device [6], and transparent electrode [4], (2) high-frequency device [5], (3) spintronics device [6], and so on. Here, I show three important research issues using graphene. As for (1), large area (ca. 30 inch) graphene was synthesized and applied for transparent electrodes for touch panel application. Since the conventional transparent electrode (tin-doped indium oxide: ITO) includes a minor metal, indium, it is requested that ITO is replaced to the other ubiquitous materials. Since graphene consists only of carbon, this fulfills this request. High frequency devices are quite important for wireless broadband networks, and IBM demonstrated 100-GHz operation of a graphene device. Spintronics using graphene is also attracting tremendous attention, because pure spin current can be propagated in graphene [6,7]. Pure spin current is a flow of spin angular momentum without a charge flow, and is an ideally energy-dissipationless current, enabling ultra low energy consumption information propagation and calculation. IV - Conclusion As presented, graphene possesses bright future for both basic science and various applications, since graphene can break a present limit of technologies. For more detail, for example, see ref. [8]. V - References [1] H.W. Kroto et al., Nature 318, 162 (1985). [2] S. Iijima, Nature 354, 56 (1991). [3] K. Novoselov et al., Science 306, 666 (2004). [4] S. Bae et al., Nature Nanotech. 5, 574 (2010). [5] Y.-M. Lin, Science 327, 662 (2010). [6] N. Tombros et al., Nature 448, 571 (2007). [7] Z. Tang, M. Shiraishi et al., Phys. Rev. B87, 140401(R), 2013. [8] M. Ruemmeli, M. Shiraishi, S. Roche, G. Cuniberti et al., Adv. Mat. 23, 4471 (2011). 《Graphene, the “miracle material”》 Glossary Standard model:【標準模型】There are 4 interactions in nature: (1) electromagnetic interaction, (2) strong interaction, (3) weak interaction, and (4) gravitational interaction. The electromagnetic interaction is an interaction that an electron is affected by electric and magnetic fields. The strong interaction is an interaction that, for example, a neutron and a positron affect each other, i.e., that nucleons in nuclei are affected. The weak interaction is an interaction that elementary particles such as quarks are affected (an elementary particle cannot be divided into some parts and does not have a domain. Electron, photon, quark and neutrino are elementary particles). The standard model unifies these 3 interactions under one equation. The Higgs particle, of which prediction and discovery was awarded for Nobel prize in Physics (2013), gives mass to particles (precisely fermions) in this model scheme. Within this model scheme, neutrino is massless, whereas experiments proved it is massive. Hence, an expansion of the standard model is necessary, which is one of the next targets in elementary particle physics. The unification of gravity has not been done, which is also an important target. Neutrino:【ニュートリノ】Neutrino is one of elementary particles. It is chargeless, and called as lepton. Wolfgang Pauli predicted it and Enrico Fermi named it. Within the standard model scheme, it is theoretically massless. However, Masatoshi Koshiba experimentally proved that it is massive. 【相対論的量子論】Quantum physics is regarded to have Relativistic quantum physics: opened the door for modern physics. Here, for example, energies are quantized, which is completely different in classical physics. Relativity includes special relativity and general relativity, and one of the most important features in relativity is that time and space are equivalent. Quantum physics that includes special relativity is called as relativistic quantum physics, and equation of motion in relativistic quantum physics is 4-dimensional because of the equivalency of time and space. Pure spin current: 【純スピン流】A flow of34spin angular momentum without a charge flow. The schematic image is shown below. Electron possesses up- or down-spins. When we assume that one up-spin goes to the right and one down-spin goes to the left, general relativity, and one of the most important features in relativity is that time and space are equivalent. Quantum physics that includes special relativity is called as relativistic quantum physics, and equation of motion in relativistic quantum physics is 4-dimensional because of the equivalency of time and space. Pure spin current: 【純スピン流】A flow of spin angular momentum without a charge flow. The schematic image is shown below. Electron possesses up- or down-spins. When we assume that one up-spin goes to the right and one down-spin goes to the left, there is no net charge flow because one electron goes to the right and the other electron goes to the left (1-1=0). Here, because of the time reversal symmetry, the down-spin that goes to the left is equivalent to the up-spin that goes to the right. This may be confusing. Let’s take a video of the above-mentioned motion of spins. When the time flow is reversed, the direction of the motion is also reversed. But in addition to the direction of motion, the direction of spin is also reversed (the detailed theory is not described here). So, the total number of up spin that goes to the right is 2 (not 1). An image of pure spin current. Solid circles show electrons (charges) and arrows in the circles show the direction of spins (up or down). The other arrows show the direction of motion. Allotrope:【同素体.】Allotropes are different structural modifications of an element. Graphene, fullerene (C60), carbon nanotube, charcoal, graphite, and diamond are all allotropes of carbon. Newton equations (of motion):【ニュートンの運動方程式】Newton equations of motion are equations that describe the behavior of a macroscopic physical system in terms of its motion as a function of time. Motion of airplanes, balls, mechanical machines and macroscopic physical systems can be predicted by using the Newton equations of motions. Schroedinger equation:【シュレーディンガー方程式】In quantum mechanics, the Schrödinger equation is a partial differential equation that describes how the quantum state of some physical system changes with time. The equation describes the behavior of electrons and atoms (microscopic). Dirac equation: 【ディラック方程式】The Dirac equation is a relativistic wave equation formulated by British physicist Paul Dirac. It describes fields corresponding to elementary spin-½ particles (such as the electron). The Dirac equation is consistent with both the principles of quantum mechanics and the theory of special relativity, and was the first theory to account fully for relativity in the context of quantum mechanics. 35 Speaker: Johann CORAUX Neel Institute UPR 2940 Hybrid systems at low dimension The Surface Science of Truly 2D Materials In 2004, Physicists started the exploration of the intrinsic properties of two-dimensional (2D) materials, first by studying graphene, an atomically-thin sheet of carbon atoms arranged in a honeycomb lattice. Since then, the interest has broadened towards other disciplines, including Chemistry and Biology, and the study of other 2D materials – boron nitride, dichalcogenides, silicene, silica – has started. These objects introduced new paradigms, not only relying on their unique 2D-specific properties, but also deriving from their platform-like topography. This true in both basic and applied research perspectives. Just because they expose flat surfaces to the outside world, 2D materials seem ideally suited to surface science studies. This approach, though, is not mainstream. I will show that, alongside the study of devices based on 2D materials, surface science has provided invaluable insights into the understanding and control of the preparation and properties of these materials, and offers great potential for manipulating their properties and giving them new ones. I will illustrate this viewpoint by (i) addressing the rich heritage of surface science studies of the preparation of graphene on metals, (ii) evoking some very recent highlights in the preparation of other 2D systems on metals, (iii) and giving a partial panorama of the toolkit which surface science offers for engineering the properties of graphene and graphenebased hybrid systems. 36 SESSION III SESSION Field earth science/environment SESSION TITLE earthquakes and associated risks 37 Session Topic: Earthquakes and Associated Risks Chair_Abstract__Earth_Science_Environment_akato Chair: III SESSION Aitaro KATO, The University of Tokyo Earth Science/Environment Field: Earthquake occurs as a result of shear slip Earthquakes and associated risks Earth Science/Environment instability along a fault embedded in the Earth’s crust, which is composed of brittle rocks. During the dynamic rupture instability, faultSession surfaces Topic: slip with Earthquakes and Associated Risks fast speed closeKATO to ~ 1.0 m/s, resulting in radiation of Chair: Aitaro Earthquake Institute, The University Tokyo seismic waves.Research Earthquake observations fromofmicro Chair: earthquakes to giant earthquakes have revealed that Aitaro KATO, The University of Tokyo shear slip instability in the Earth’s interior Earthquake aoccurs occurs aaresult of shear along a Earthquake as result of shear slip encompass muchas broader range ofslip sizeinstability and fault embedded in For the embedded Earth’s crust,frequency which composed of brittle instability along a fault in theis Earth’s temporal scales. example, of rocks. During the dynamic rupture instability, fault surfaces slip reduces power law scaling ofthe an crust,earthquakes which composed of brittle rocks. During with fastisspeed close to with ~ 1.0 m/s, resulting in radiation of seisincreasing While havemicro a slip huge numbertoof small earthquakes, giant dynamic instability, faultwe surfaces with micrupture waves.magnitude. Earthquake observations from earthquakes giantclose earthquakes havem/s, revealed that shear instability earthquakes infrequent. These multi-scale behaviors fast speed toare ~ 1.0 resulting in slip radiation ofin the of earthquakes are fundamental Earth’s interior encompass a much broader range of size and property, to complicated spatio-temporal seismic waves.leading Earthquake observations from microevolutions of earthquake activity. temporal scales. For example, frequency of earthquakes reduces In the to past decade, an unusual family of earthquake, which is called as “slow earthquakes giant earthquakes have revealed that with power law scaling of an increasing magnitude. While we has in been extensively discovered around the world. Slow earthquakes occur haveinstability a huge number of small earthquakes, giant earthquakes shearearthquake”, slip the Earth’s interior asare a shear slip These event along tectonic fault hosts ordinary earthquake, but the slip infrequent. multi-scale behaviors of that earthquakes are encompass a much broader range of size and fundamental to ordinary complicatedearthquake. spatio-temporal speed is muchproperty, slowerleading than an Slow earthquakes are mostly located temporal scales.of For example, frequency of evolutions earthquake activity. on the shallower and deeper extensions of major rupture areas of giant earthquakes. This earthquakes reduces powerfamily law scaling of anwhich is In the past decade,with an unusual of earthquake, means that slow earthquakes will increase stress on the major rupture areas. Thus, it has called as “slow earthquake”, has been extensively discovered increasing magnitude. While we have a huge number of small earthquakes, giant been keenly discussed about interaction between slow earthquakes andfault ordinary around the world. Slow earthquakes occur as a shear slip event along tectonic hosts ordinary earthquakes are infrequent. These multi-scale behaviors of earthquakes are that fundamental earthquakes. Prior to the 2011 Mw 9.0 Tohoku earthquake in Japan, seismic and geodetic earthquake, but the slip speed is much slower than an ordinary earthquake. Slow earthquakes are mostly property, leading to complicated spatio-temporal evolutions of earthquake activity. located on the shallower and deeperfor extensions of major rupture areas giant earthquakes. measurements provide evidence the propagation of slow slipofevents toward theThis Mwmeans In the past decade, an unusual family of earthquake, which isThus, called asbeen “slow that slow earthquakes will increase stress on the major rupture areas. it has keenly discussed 9.0 epicenter. The slow slip events may have caused stress loading onto the prospective about interaction between slow earthquakes and around ordinary the earthquakes. Prior toearthquakes the 2011 Mw 9.0 Tohoku earthquake”, has been extensively discovered world. Slow occur hypocenter the mainshock prompted the initiation of unstable dynamic rupture. earthquake of in Japan, seismic andand geodetic measurements provide evidence for the propagation of slow slip as a shear slip event along tectonic faultlarge that hosts ordinary earthquake, but the preceded slip Other show that most oncaused plate stress interfaces eventsrecent towardstudies the Mw 9.0 epicenter. The slow slipearthquakes events may have loadingwere onto the prospecspeedbyis slower than an ordinary earthquake. Slow earthquakes are mostly located tive hypocenter of the mainshock andactivity, prompted the amuch phase of increased seismic for initiation of unstable dynamic rupture. on the shallower and mechanism deeper extensions of recent major which a possible is theOther slow slip. rupture areas of giant earthquakes. This studies show that most large earthquakes on plate on the major rupture areas. Thus, it has means In that slow earthquakes stress this session, we wouldwill likeincrease to discuss interfaces were preceded by a phase of increased been earthquakes keenly about between and associated in theis slow earthquakes and ordinary seismicdiscussed activity, forthe which a interaction possible risks mechanism earthquakes. todiversity the 2011ofMw 9.0 Tohoku earthquake in Japan, seismic and geodetic viewpoints of (1) earthquakes, the slow Prior slip. this session, we would like tobased discuss earthquakes measurements provide evidence for the propagation of slow slip events toward the Mw (2)Inearthquake mechanics on and the associated risks in the viewpoints of (1) laboratoryThe experiments, and (3)may disaster 9.0 epicenter. slow slip events have caused stress loading onto the prospective diversity of earthquakes, (2) earthquake mechanics risk assessment from engineering hypocenter of mainshock and prompted the initiation of unstable dynamic rupture. based onthe laboratory experiments, and and (3) disaster approaches. Otherscientific recent studies show that mostand large earthquakes on plate interfaces were preceded risk assessment from engineering scientific approaches. by a phase of increased seismic activity, for which a possible mechanism is the slow slip. In this session, we would like to discuss earthquakes and the associated risks in the viewpoints of (1) diversity of earthquakes, (2) earthquake mechanics based on laboratory experiments, and (3) disaster risk assessment from engineering and 38 Speaker: Hiroyuki GOTO Disaster Prevention Research Institute, Kyoto University I - Introduction In the last decade, we experienced huge natural disasters due to earthquake, flood, volcanic explosion, landslide, etc. The 2004 Sumatra-Andaman earthquake caused a huge tsunami, and it killed more than 220 thousand people living in the coastal area of Indian ocean. 2008 Wenchuan and 2010 Haiti earthquakes directly hit inland areas, and caused a large amount of victims due to ground motions. The 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku earthquake hit the eastern part of mainland Japan, and caused a huge tsunami that killed more than ten thousand people. Japanese government estimates 16.9 trillion JPY economic losses associated with the earthquake disaster. Disaster risk is evaluated from occurrence of hazard and vulnerability of human society. In order to reduce the risk, government encourages the vulnerability improvement, such as structure retrofitting, evacuation training, etc. From both science and engineering points of view, I introduce the recent disaster risk assessment, and interesting research topics in this field. II - Seismic design concept In a classical seismic design, engineers just follow a design specification, which contains a detail procedure to check seismic desistance of target structures. Recently, performance-based design has been applied to the seismic design. The performance depends on importance of the target structure, and is defined by a set 1) how it damages and 2) how frequent the seismic load excites it, e.g., “safety” under “rare” seismic event, “functional” under “frequent” event. Client provides the performance that is determined from cost, benefit, social situation, etc. Engineer designs the target structure as satisfying the performance. They owe different accountabilities, selection of the performance for client and implementation of the performance for engineer. In the performance-based design, the natural maximum seismic event is not essential. The logic, cost and accountability for the selected performance have a priority. III - Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Analysis (PSHA) The cost consists of initial construction cost, maintenance cost, and also total loss due to earthquake disaster. The loss is usually estimated from fragility of the structure and probabilistic seismic hazard. Seismic hazard map is a typical output of PSHA as the intermediate products. PSHA is based on a probability of earthquake occurrence, and a variation on seismic wave propagations. The latter variation comes from a probability model of amplitude decays from seismic source, and a spatial difference on ground amplification. IV -Variation of Ground Amplification Local geology controls the ground amplification qualitatively, and it causes the spatial differences. In current PSHA, it is usually modeled by deterministic variables. We focus on the variation characteristics on the ground amplification based on the innovative measurement. In the downtown, where there is a large potential of earthquake disaster, the dense measurement of ground motion has not been performed. We developed an advanced system for very dense seismic array observation, and installed it in Furukawa district, Japan, which was the damaged area during the 2011 Tohoku earthquake (Goto et al., 2011). It captures more than 500 39 events, and reveals the spatial and also site-specific variations. For variation modeling, we should connect the variation characteristics to spatial inhomogeneities of underground structure. I’ve developed physics-based decomposition of the ground amplification, and it enables to model arbitrary response as a superposition of simple states. We apply it to the variation modeling as a stochastic superposition. V -Conclusion In risk assessment, scientific knowledge has been put to practical use. On the other hand, scientific innovation, such as variation modeling and convinced mechanism, for logical discussion between client and engineer is still in progress. VI -References 1. Goto, H., et al., “Earthquake source and ground motion characteristics in eastern Japan during the 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku earthquake”, Journal of JSCE, 1(2013), 329-342. 2. Goto, H., et al., “Very dense seismic array observations in Furukawa district, Japan”, Seism. Res. Lett., 83(2011), 765-774. 3. Goto, H., “Series expansion of complex ground amplifications by a sequence of simple transfer functions”, Earthquake Engng. Struct. Dyn., submitted. 40 《Earthquakes and Associated Risks》 Glossary the 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku earthquake:【2011 年東北地方太平洋沖地震】is an earthquake occurred in March 2011 along the plate boundary between the subducting Pacific plate and the north-American plate, caused severe tsunami damages along eastern coast of the mainland Japan. Crust:【地殻】is the outermost layer of the Earth. Crust is very thin in comparison with the underlying mantle and core. The thickness of crust is only about 8 km under the oceans (oceanic crust) and about 35 km under the continents (continental crust). The crust is brittle enough to produce earthquakes. CV:【変動係数】(Coefficient of Variation) is a normalized measure of variation, defined as a ratio of standard deviation to a mean. Deep-Focus earthquake:【深発地震】 Earthquakes occurring within the 400-700km depth window are termed deep-focus earthquakes and are systematically associated with subduction of tectonic plates. Disaster risk:【災害リスク】is a degree of disaster effectiveness, defined by natural hazard multiplying vulnerability of human society. ハザードと社会の脆弱性の掛け合わせとして定義される災害の程度を表す尺度. Dislocation:【転位】 In materials science, a dislocation is a crystallographic defect, or irregularity, within a crystal structure. Fault:【断層】is a fracture along which the blocks of crust on either side have moved relative to one another parallel to the fracture. Ground amplification:【地盤増幅率】is a ratio between input and surface ground motions. It depends on geology and stiffness of soils. Damage spots appear due to the spatial difference during the earthquake disaster. Ground motion:【地震動】is a ground surface shaking due to seismic wave radiated from earthquake source. Gutenberg-Richter’s law : 【 グ ー テ ン ベ ル グ ・ リ ヒ タ ー 則 】 In seismology, the Gutenberg–Richter law expresses the relationship between the magnitude and total number of earthquakes in any given region and time period of at least that magnitude. Magnitude:【マグニチュード】is a fundamental measure of the size of an earthquake in terms of the energy released during the slip. Olivine:【カンラン石】The mineral olivine (when of gem quality, also called peridot) is a magnesium iron silicate with the formula (Mg+2, Fe+2)2SiO4. Olivine and high pressure structural variants constitute over 50% of the Earth's upper mantle, and olivine is one of the Earth's most common minerals by volume. 41 Omori’s law:【余震の大森公式】Omori's law, or more correctly the modified Omori's law, is an empirical relation for the temporal decay of aftershock rates. Performance-based design:【性能設計】is a type of engineering design, defining a target performance under an external load. In seismic design, the performance is usually defined by a state after the earthquake loading. 外力に応じて性能を規定し,性能を満足することを要求する設計法 PSHA:【地震ハザード評価】(Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Analysis) is a probabilistic approach to estimate a seismic hazard. Seismic array observation:【地震アレー観測】is a system of ground motion measurement by spatially distributing seismometers. Slab:【スラブ】In geology, a slab is the portion of a tectonic plate that is being subducted. Slip:【滑り】is the relative displacement of formerly adjacent points on opposite sides of a fault. Slow earthquake:【ゆっくり地震】is slow energy release process along a fault, of which duration is significantly longer than one of ordinary earthquake. For example, slow-slip events with magnitude ~ 6.0 continue for days to months. Spectral intensity:【SI 値】is a one of the ground motion indexes, representing an effectiveness to the structure response. SI is better correlation with the structure damages. 地 震被害と相関が高いとされる地震動の強さ指標の1つ.日本では都市ガスの供給停止 の判断に利用されている. Stress:【応力】is the force per unit area acting on a plane within a body. Superplasticity:【超塑性】In materials science, superplasticity is a state in which solid crystalline material is deformed well beyond its usual breaking point, usually over about 200% during tensile deformation. Examples of superplastic materials are some fine-grained metals and ceramics. Tectonic Plate:【プレート】is the moving outermost layer of the Earth. There are eight major plates in the Earth. The speed of lateral relative movements of the plates ranges from 1 to 25 cm/year. Each plate is composed of crust and upper most mantle. 42 Speaker: Alexandre SCHUBNEL Laboratoire de Géologie, CNRS, Ecole normale supérieure de Paris Deep focus earthquake analogs recorded at high pressure and temperature in the laboratory I - Introduction The largest deep earthquake ever recorded happened on May 24th 2013. It was of a magnitude Mw=8.3 and happened 620km deep below the earth surface, under the sea of Okhotsk (1). While the existence of deep earthquakes have been known since the 1920’s (2-3), the essential mechanical process responsible for them is still poorly understood and remained one of the outstanding unsolved problems of geophysics and rock mechanics. Indeed, deep focus earthquake occur in an environment fundamentally different from that of shallow (<100 km) earthquakes (4), nowadays relatively well understood on the basis of theories relying on the properties of fracture, coalescing cracks and friction (5-6). As pressure and temperature increase with depth however, intra crystalline plasticity starts to dominate the deformation regime so that rocks yield by plastic flow rather than by brittle fracturing (6). II - Content of talk Olivine phase transitions have provided an attractive alternative mechanism for deep focus earthquakes (7-9). Indeed, the Earth mantle transition zone (410-700km) is the locus of the two successive polymorphic transitions (α->β and β->γ) of olivine, the most abundant upper mantle mineral. Such scenario, however, runs into the conceptual barrier of initiating failure in a pressure (P) and temperature (T) regime where deviatoric stress (Δσ) relaxation is expected to be achieved through plastic flow. Here, we performed laboratory deformation experiments on Germanium olivine (Mg2GeO4) under differential stress at high pressure (P=2-5GPa) and within a narrow temperature range (T=1000-1250K). We find that fractures nucleate at the onset of the olivine to spinel transition. These fractures propagate dynamically (i.e. at a non-negligible fraction of the shear wave velocity) so that intense acoustic emissions are generated. Similar to deep-focus earthquakes, these acoustic emissions arise from pure shear sources, and obey the Gutenberg-Richter law without following Omori’s law. Microstructural observations prove that dynamic weakening likely involves superplasticity of the nanocrystalline spinel reaction product at seismic strain rates. III - Conclusions Although in our experiments the absolute stress value remains high compared to stresses expected within the cold core of subducted slabs (10), the observed stress drops are broadly consistent with those calculated for deep earthquakes (4). Constant differential stress conditions at failure over a wide range of confinement (2-5GPa) strongly suggest that transformational faulting is largely independent of normal stress and thus involves non-frictional processes. We suggest that rupture nucleation is controlled by dislocation density and spinel nucleation kinetics, while propagation is controlled by superplastic flow. High stress and high dislocation density conditions can be met in a cold subducting slab full of metastable olivine (11), due to stress concentrations at the micro and mesoscopic scales because of buckling, folding, and/or inherited fractures (12). This is particularly true in the Tonga-Kermadec region for instance, for which the largest catalog of deep focus earthquake is available (4). IV - References 1. Ye L., Lay T., Kanamori H. and Koper K.D., Energy release of the 2013 Mw8.3 Sea of Okhotsk earthquake and deep slab stress heterogeneity, Science, 341, 1380-1384, 2013. 2. Turner H.H., On the arrival of earthquake waves at the antipodes and the measurement of the focal depth of an earthquake, Mon. Roy. Astr. Soc. , Geophys. Suppl., 1, 1-13, 1922. 3. Wadati, K. 1928. Shallow and deep earthquakes. Geophys. Afag. 1 : 1 6 1 -202 4. C. Frohlich, Deep Earthquakes, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, U. K., 574 pp., (2006). 5. J.D. Byerlee, Friction of Rocks. Pure and Applied Geophysics, 116, 586-602 (1978). 6. 4. M.S. Paterson, T-f. Wong, Experimental rock deformation – the brittle field. (Springer–Verlag, Berlin Heidelberg, 2005). 43 7. D.T. Griggs, D.W. Baker, The origin of deep-focus earthquakes, H. Mark, S. Fernbach Eds, (Interscience, New York 1969), pp. 23-42. 8. S. Kirby, Localized polymorphic phase transformations in high-pressure faults and applications to the physical mechanism of deep earthquakes. Journal of Geophysical Research, 92, 13789-13800 (1987). 9. Green, H.W., Burnley, P.C., 1989. A new self-organizing mechanism for deep-focus earthquakes. Nature 341, 733– 737. 10. Bina, C. R., S. Stein, F. C. Marton, and E. M. Van Ark, Implications of slab mineralogy for subduction dynamics, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, 127, 51-66, (2001). 11. Iidaka T and Suetsugu D, Seismological evidence for metastable olivine inside a subducting slab, Nature, 356, 593-595, (1992). 12. Myhill R., Slab buckling and its effect on the distributions and focal mechanisms of deep-focus earthquakes. Geophysical Journal International, ggs054 (2012). V - Glossary • Deep-Focus earthquake: Earthquakes occurring within the 400-700km depth window are termed deepfocus earthquakes and are systematically associated with subduction zones. • Olivine: The mineral olivine (when of gem quality, also called peridot) is a magnesium iron silicate with the formula (Mg+2, Fe+2)2SiO4. Olivine and high pressure structural variants constitute over 50% of the Earth's upper mantle, and olivine is one of the Earth's most common minerals by volume. • Gutenberg-Richter’s law: In seismology, the Gutenberg–Richter law expresses the relationship between the magnitude and total number of earthquakes in any given region and time period of at least that magnitude. • Omori’s law: Omori's law, or more correctly the modified Omori's law, is an empirical relation for the temporal decay of aftershock rates. • Superplasticity: In materials science, superplasticity is a state in which solid crystalline material is deformed well beyond its usual breaking point, usually over about 200% during tensile deformation. Examples of superplastic materials are some fine-grained metals and ceramics. • Slab: In geology, a slab is the portion of a tectonic plate that is being subducted. • Dislocation: In materials science, a dislocation is a crystallographic defect, or irregularity, within a crystal structure. 44 SESSION IV session Field MATHEMATICS/INFORMATICS session TITLE BAYESIAN STATISTICS 45 SESSION IV Mathematics/Informatics Bayesian Statistics Chair: Seiya IMOTO The Institute of Medical Science, The University of Tokyo Thomas Bayes was born in London in 1702 and died in 1761 leaving a note with a part of a proof of Bayes's theorem. In recent years, Bayes's theorem or Bayesian statistics has become a sound theoretical base for data analyses, control, prediction and discovery in various research fields including social science, engineering, life science and so on. In this section, after illustrating the essential idea of Bayesian statistics, we show some paradoxical examples, discuss the historical argument between the Bayesian and frequentist schools of thought, subjectivist around priors, and end with a few cutting edge real examples. Bayesian statistics can be considered as a mathematical framework for updating existing knowledge of subject or parameter of interest by getting observational data. In Bayesian statistics, the knowledge of the parameter is supposed to be represented by a probability function called prior probability; for example we know the mean height of men is around 170cm but it varies depending on populations. The prior probability function of the parameter will be updated using the information of observed data by Bayes theorem; it achieves posterior probability of the parameter (updated knowledge by the data). In other words, the framework of Bayesian statistics allows us to integrate additional information (prior probability) with the information of the data represented by the likelihood function. Getting the posterior probability function of the parameter of interest is a crucial task in data analysis from a Bayesian point of view. It contains high dimensional integral in continuous case or combinatorial summation in discrete case, and mainly two approaches have been proposed; exact and approximate computations. The former approach restricts data analysts to use limited types of prior probability functions but can later be relaxed. However, the computational cost of the former is much lighter than that of the later. Toshio Ohnishi will present the first approach in the Bayesian model averaging that combines a lot of Bayesian statistical models and the problem of minimizing Bayes risk that measures the badness of statistical models. Michael Blum will present a problem in population genetics with the second approach. Finally we will discuss the applicability of Bayesian methods to big data like the genomic data used in Blum’s talk, and compare them with data-only-methods. Speaker: Toshio OHNISHI Faculty of Economics, Kyushu University I - Introduction Maximization of the likelihood and that of the Shannon entropy are two of the most famous principles in statistics. The former derives the well-known maximum likelihood estimator. The latter is applied to find the most "random" statistical model in the wake of the second law of thermodynamics. This paper reveals a notable relationship between the two principles, which is a generalization of the result in Ohnishi & Yanagimoto (2013). A Bayesian model assumes not only a sampling density function with an unknown parameter but also a prior density function for the unknown parameter, while frequentists' model assumes the former only. The sampling density function is a statistical model for mechanism behind a data. The unknown parameter to be estimated is also regarded as a random variable in a Bayesian model. 46 Prediction, or density estimation, is a generalization of parameter estimation. The true density function is estimated based on a data. The estimated density function is called a predictor. A loss function is adopted to compare more than one predictor. It is a kind of "price" we have to pay when a predictor is different from the true density function. The performance of a predictor is assessed by the expected value of the loss function, which is called the Bayes risk in the case of a Bayesian model. Finding the best predictor is formulated as an optimization problem, i.e., minimization of the Bayes risk. The Kullback-Leibler divergence, denoted by KL(q,p) is one of the fundamental quantities in statistics. Roughly speaking, it is the distance between the two density functions q and p. Unlike the Euclidean distance, it is asymmetrical, i.e., KL(q,p) ≠ KL(p,q). Nevertheless, they appear as a pair in theoretical statistics, and are said to be dual to each other (Amari & Nagaoka, 2000). We adopt dual Kullback-Leibler divergences KL(q,p) and KL(p,q) as loss functions, where q is a predictor and p is the true density function. They are called the e-and the m-divergence loss functions, respectively. This duality turns out to link the likelihood maximization and the Shannon entropy maximization. This paper investigates Bayesian model averaging, which is to average a number of Bayesian models according to our belief. We index those Bayesian models by introducing a parameterξ. The belief is represented by a density function h (ξ). Bayesian model averaging can cover such situations that we often encounter in actual data analyses. We investigate the Bayesian model averaging in the framework of prediction problem. Two optimization problems are formulated. One is under the e-divergence loss function, and the other is under the m-divergence loss function. Each of them consists of (1) the best predictor in the ξ th Bayesian model and (2) a weight function h (ξ). II - Results in the -divergence loss case A "geometric mean" of the best predictors with weight h (ξ) plays an important role in this section, which we call the -mixture. Theorem 1. The following statements hold under the -divergence. (i) The -mixture is the solution to the Bayes risk minimization problem. (ii) The Bayes risk minimization is equivalent to maximization of the Shannon entropy under a constraint. Maximization of the likelihood with respect to a weight function h (ξ) leads to the worst prediction. (iii) Maximization of the minimum Bayes risk with respect to a weight function h (ξ) leads to a constant-risk prediction. The essence of the proof of Theorem 1(ii) is a "reverse" procedure of the Lagrange multiplier method. Note that the Lagrange multiplier method rewrites an optimization problem with a constraint into an equivalent optimization problem free of constraints. III - Results in the -divergence loss case The roles of the likelihood maximization and the Shannon entropy maximization are reversed in the case of the m divergence loss function. An "arithmetic mean" of the best predictors with weight h (ξ) plays an key role, which we call the m-mixture. Theorem 2. The following statements hold under the -divergence. (i) The m-mixture is the solution to the Bayes risk minimization problem. (ii) The Bayes risk minimization is equivalent to maximization of the likelihood under a constraint. Maximization of the Shannon entropy with respect to a weight function h(ξ) leads to the worst prediction. (iii) Maximization of the minimum Bayes risk with respect to a weight function h(ξ) leads to a constant-risk prediction. IV - Conclusion • Maximization of the likelihood and that of the Shannon entropy are dual to each other in the sense of the duality between the e-and the m-divergences. • In each case maximization of the minimum risk leads to a constant-risk prediction. 47 V - References 1. Amari, S-I. and Nagaoka, H. (2000). Methods of Information Geometry. American Mathematical Society, Load Island. 2. Hoeting, J.A., Madigan, D., Raftery, A.E. and Volinsky, C.T. (1999). Bayesian model averaging: a tutorial. Statistical Science, 14, 382-417. 3. Ohnishi, T. and Yanagimoto, T. (2013). Two fold structure of duality in Bayesian model averaging. Journal of the Japan Statistical Society, 43, 29-55. 《Bayesian Statistics》 Glossary Bayesian model: 【Bayes モデル】In Bayesian statistics we assume a prior density function in addition to a sampling density function. The former is a density function for the unknown parameter in the latter. We call a combination of these density functions a Bayesian model. Bayes risk: 【Bayes リスク】The expected value of a loss function, which should be minimized. The expectation is calculated with respect to a Bayesian model. Density function: 【密度関数】A probability density function is sometimes referred to simply as a density function. Duality:【双対性】The Kullback-Leibler divergences KL(𝑝𝑝, 𝑞𝑞) and KL(𝑞𝑞, 𝑝𝑝) are said to be dual to each other. 𝒆𝒆-mixture:【𝒆𝒆-混合】A "geometric mean" of density functions. The 𝑒𝑒-mixture 𝑞𝑞𝑒𝑒 of the densities 𝑝𝑝1 and 𝑝𝑝2 with weight (𝑎𝑎, 1 − 𝑎𝑎) is defined by 𝑞𝑞𝑒𝑒 ∝ 𝑝𝑝1𝑎𝑎 𝑝𝑝21−𝑎𝑎 . Frequentists' model: 【頻度主義のモデル】We assume a probability density function with an unknown parameter in order to make an inference about a data. The assumed density is sometimes called frequentists' model in contrast to a Bayesian model. Kullback-Leibler divergence:【Kullback-Leibler ダイバージェンス】A measure of discrepancy of two density functions. The Kullback-Leibler divergence from 𝑞𝑞 to 𝑝𝑝 is defined by KL(𝑞𝑞, 𝑝𝑝) = ∫ 𝑞𝑞 log 𝑞𝑞 𝑝𝑝 . It is asymmetric, i.e., KL(𝑞𝑞, 𝑝𝑝) ≠ KL(𝑝𝑝, 𝑞𝑞). Likelihood:【尤度】A fundamental quantity in statistics. When a sampling density function 𝑝𝑝(𝑦𝑦; 𝜃𝜃) is assumed for a data 𝑥𝑥, the likelihood is defined as 𝑝𝑝(𝑥𝑥; 𝜃𝜃). This is a measure of how the statistical model 𝑝𝑝(𝑦𝑦; 𝜃𝜃) fits the data 𝑥𝑥. The well-known maximum likelihood estimator is derived as the value 𝜃𝜃 maximizing the likelihood 𝑝𝑝(𝑥𝑥; 𝜃𝜃). Loss function:【損失関数】A criterion by which we assess predictors. We adopt the dual loss functions, the 𝑒𝑒- and the 𝑚𝑚-divergence loss functions. When estimating the true density function 𝑝𝑝 = 𝑝𝑝(𝑦𝑦; 𝜃𝜃) by the predictor 𝑞𝑞 = 𝑞𝑞(𝑦𝑦|𝑥𝑥), these are expressed respectively as KL(𝑞𝑞, 𝑝𝑝) and KL(𝑝𝑝, 𝑞𝑞). 48 𝒎𝒎-mixture:【𝒎𝒎-混合】An "arithmetic" mean of density functions. The 𝑚𝑚-mixture 𝑞𝑞𝑚𝑚 of the densities 𝑝𝑝1 and 𝑝𝑝2 with weight (𝑎𝑎, 1 − 𝑎𝑎) is defined by 𝑞𝑞𝑚𝑚 = 𝑎𝑎𝑝𝑝1 + (1 − 𝑎𝑎)𝑝𝑝2 . function 𝑝𝑝 = 𝑝𝑝(𝑦𝑦; 𝜃𝜃) by the predictor 𝑞𝑞 = 𝑞𝑞(𝑦𝑦|𝑥𝑥), these are expressed respectively as KL(𝑞𝑞, 𝑝𝑝) and KL(𝑝𝑝, 𝑞𝑞). 𝒎𝒎-mixture:【𝒎𝒎-混合】An "arithmetic" mean of density functions. The 𝑚𝑚-mixture 𝑞𝑞𝑚𝑚 of the densities 𝑝𝑝1 and 𝑝𝑝2 with weight (𝑎𝑎, 1 − 𝑎𝑎) is defined by 𝑞𝑞𝑚𝑚 = 𝑎𝑎𝑝𝑝1 + (1 − 𝑎𝑎)𝑝𝑝2 . Model averaging:【モデル平均】Averaging a number of statistical models with a certain weight. Model averaging is an alternative to the model selection, which is to choose one statistical model among competing ones. Prediction problem:【予測問題】Estimating an unknown true density function 𝑝𝑝(𝑦𝑦; 𝜃𝜃) by a predictor 𝑞𝑞(𝑦𝑦|𝑥𝑥) based on the data 𝑥𝑥. This is a generalization of parameter estimation where we restrict ourselves within the predictors of the form 𝑝𝑝(𝑦𝑦; 𝜃𝜃�) with 𝜃𝜃� = 𝜃𝜃�(𝑥𝑥) being an estimator. Predictor:【予測分布】A density function by which we estimate an unknown true density function. It is a density function for a random variable 𝑦𝑦 given a data 𝑥𝑥, and is denoted by 𝑞𝑞(𝑦𝑦|𝑥𝑥). Prior and posterior density functions:【事前および事後密度関数】Probability density functions corresponding to a prior and a posterior distribution, respectively. In Bayesian statistics a prior density is assumed to describe our prior belief about an unknown parameter in a sampling density function. A posterior density, which plays a key role in Bayesian statistics, is calculated by way of the Bayes theorem. Shannon entropy:【Shannon エントロピー】A fundamental quantity in information theory. A measure of randomness of the density function 𝑝𝑝, which is defined by H[𝑝𝑝] = − ∫ 𝑝𝑝 log 𝑝𝑝. Maximization of the Shannon entropy is employed to derive a sampling density function when small amount of information is available. Sampling density function:【標本の密度関数】In both Frequentist' model and Bayesian model we assume a density function as mechanism behind a data. We call it a sampling density to distinguish it from a prior density function. 49 Speaker: Michael BLUM UMR 5525 Techniques de l'Ingénierie Médicale et de la Complexité - TIMC - IMAG Bayesian Principal Component Analysis for detecting genes involved in Darwinian selection Using large numbers of genomic markers, genome scans can reveal a proportion of loci that deviate from neutral expectations because they contribute to Darwinian selection. This prominent biological process results in greater fitness of individuals in their local habitats due to natural selection. Understanding the genomic architecture of adaptation in humans is crucial to understand how past selection impacted disease susceptibility in modern populations. Here, we introduce an original method that seeks for outlier genomic regions using Bayesian principal component analysis. Bayesian approaches for genome scans have the desirable feature that they can control for the false discovery rate. Compared to more traditional approaches that are based on indices of genetic differentiation between populations, Bayesian PCA is fully unsupervised and do not require populations to be defined in advance. Using simulated data as well as a dataset of worldwide human genetic variation, we show the potential of Bayesian PCA for performing genome scans. 50 SESSION V session Field PHYSICS AND ASTROPHYSICS session TITLE SUPERSOLIDITY AND QUANTUM PLASTICITY 51 SESSION V Physics and Astrophysics Supersolidity and quantum plasticity Chair: Christophe JOSSERAND UMR 7190 - Institut Jean d'Alembert I - Introduction Superfluids and Bose-Einstein condensates exhibit quantum behavior at macroscopic scale. One of their striking properties is that their viscosity vanishes under certain conditions and thus that it can flow without dissipation. Since the half if the 20th centuries, the possibility of such property for solids has been questioned. Since 2004, this quest for supersolidity has been revived by experimental results on torsional oscillators, results that have been shown to be misleading recently, since elastic effects explain the experimental signal. Tracking supersolidity has also led to focus on the specific properties of solid at very low temperature: the so-called quantum plasticity. The goal of this session is to present this supersolid story. II - Content of talk I will introduce and discuss the superfluidity and some striking experiments. Then I will present the specific challenge of supersolidity. Two different specific session will then discuss recent results on the field. III - Conclusions Even if the supersolidity claimed in 2004 appears to be due to other effects, supersolids are now investigated in many other physical systems. IV - References A.F. Andreev and I.M. Lifshitz, Sov. Phys. JETP. 29, 1107 (1969). A.J. Leggett, Phys. Rev. Letters, 25, 1543 (1970). E. Kim and M.H.W. Chan, Nature (London) 427, 225 (2004). S. Sasaki, R. Ishiguro, F. Caupin, H. J. Maris, S. Balibar, Science 313, 1098 (2006). Glossary if necessary: Bose-Einstein condensate: atomic gases forming at low temperature a condensate; in that case a macroscopic part of the atoms can be described by the same quantum state. Superfluid: at very low temperature some fluid (in particular liquid Helium) undergo a transition under which their viscosity vanishes. Speaker: Daisuke TAKAHASHI Ashikaga Institute of Technology I - Introduction In the last decade, after the discovery of putative supersolid behaviors in 4He in torsional oscillator (TO) experiments by Kim and Chan [1], lots of efforts have been devoted to uncover their origin. Anomalies of solid 4He have been found in TO responses, which indicate reduction of rotational inertia, (Nonclassical Rotational Inertia, NCRI), heat capacity [2], and elastic property with an increase of shear modulus [3]. TO and heat capacity results strongly support the emergence of macroscopic coherent state similar to superfluid, while the shear modulus is controversial. The increase in shear modulus is explained well by pinning of dislocations by 3He atoms contained in solid 4He samples as an impurity[3,4]. Kim and Chan have recently claimed that the NCRI of solid 4He formed in nanopores of a porous Vycor glass is absent [4]. This reinforces the scenario that the stiffening of solid 4He is the major cause of NCRI seen in many TO studies, because there seems no dislocation networks in solid formed in nanopores[4]. In order to elucidate the nature of NCRI, we perform TO measurements for solid 4He, with rotating 52 the whole setup (“DC” rotation). If solid 4He possesses a macroscopic quantum nature, DC rotation can generate superflow and its quantization, i.e. quantized vortices. II - Continuous (i.e. DC) Rotating Experiment When a bucket containing superfluid rotates faster than some critical DC angular velocity, irrotational property of the superfluid is broken, and the whole superfluid starts to rotate with the bucket because of the formation of quantized vortex array. The number of vortices increases in proportion to the angular velocity. The existence of quantized vortex is in general a definite evidence of macroscopic quantum state[6]. Superimposing DC rotation onto apparatus measuring NCRI or shear modulus may reveal the quantum nature of solid 4He. We simultaneously measured the resonant frequency of TO and shear modulus of bulk solid helium under DC rotation with angular velocities between 0 and 4 rad/s. The DC rotation substantially decreases NCRI in annular solid samples, while no DC rotation effect was seen in shear modulus [7]. This result strongly supports that any connection between NCRI and shear modulus is indirect. The change in NCRI under DC rotation is possibly attributed to an appearance of quantized circulation. III - Evidence of Quantization : Quantum oscillation We currently study the effect of DC rotation on NCRI of composite of solid 4 He confined in a porous Vycor glass (pore size: 6 nm) and bulk solid 4He. Depletion of NCRI is observed at much smaller rotation speed than bulk solid 4He does. The dependence of NCRI on angular velocity Ω has a very intriguing oscillating structure, in which the oscillation becomes periodic when NCRI is plotted as a function of Ω−1 (Fig. 1). This behavior reminds us ”quantum oscillation” phenomena observed in electrons in metals and semiconductors under magnetic field, such as de Haas van Alphen effect. The NCRI maxima and minima are periodically located very well. Here, each NCRI maximum or minimum could correspond to integer quantum number. In order to see the quantization, we number the NCRI minima 2 to 9. This number is referred to as Quantum Number N. We plot the locations of minima, ΩMin-1 against N are shown in Fig. 2. The ΩMin-1 is obviously proportional 0 to N. This result is the first clear observation of quantization phenomenon in solid 4He under DC rotation. IV - Conclusion We have found that the TO response (NCRI) of solid 4He is sensitive to DC rotation, while the shear modulus is not. In composite solid samples containing porous Vycor we observed for the first time a signature of quantization phenomenon. This quantization appears as the quantum oscillation of Ω−1, which is reminiscent of the quantum oscillation in charged fermion systems. Although this oscillation needs further study, it gives a new aspect to physics of solid matter. V - References [1] E. Kim and M. H. W. Chan, Nature 427, 225 (2004); E. Kim and M. H. W. Chan, Science 405, 1941 (2004) [2] X. Lin, A. C. Clark, and M. H. W. Chan, Nature 449, 1025 (2007) [3] J. Day and J. Beamish, Nature 450, 853 (2007) [4] A. Haziot, X. Rojas. A. D. Fefferman, J. R. Beamish, S. Baliber, Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, 035301 (2013) [5] D. Y. Kim and M. H. W. Chan, Phys. Rev. Lett. 109, 155301 (2012) [6] “Quantum Liquids” : A. J. Legget, Oxford University Press (2006) [7] H. Choi, D. Takahashi, K. Kono, and E. Kim, Science 330 (2010); H. Choi, D. Takahashi, W. Choi, K. Kono, and E. Kim, Phys. Rev. Lett. 108, 105302 (2012); W. Choi, D. Takahashi, H. Choi, K. Kono, and E. Kim, Phys Rev. B. 86, 174505 (2012) 53 《Supersolidity and quantum plasticity》 Glossary Dislocation: 【転位】is a linear defect in a crystal structure. Strain onto material induces the motion of dislocation and therefore atoms around the dislocation are rearranged. The density of the dislocation mostly determines the stiffness of the metal. Helium3 (3He):【ヘリウム 3】 is the lightest noble gas. The atom consisting of one Proton, two Neutrons and electrons is neutral. The natural abundance is 0.00014% of Helium on the earth. Helium4 (4He): 【ヘリウム 4】 is the simplest and light noble gas. The atom consisting of two Neutrons, Protons, and electrons is neutral. Because of its large zero point motion, Helium will remain liquid to absolute zero at atmosphere pressure. Helium solidifies above 25 bar below 4 K. Even in the solid phase, the position of atoms is not well localized at the lattice point by quantum fluctuation effect. Nanopore: 【ナノ細穴】is a hole the size of 10-9m which is almost 10 times larger than the atomic scale. Quantized vortex (vortices) :【量子渦】is a topological defect existing in superfluids and superconductors. The number of the vortex is quantized, which increases discretely. Superflow:【超流動の流れ】is a flow of superfluid. Superfluid:【超流動】is a zero-viscocity fluid. It can pass through a tiny hole size of atomic scale. When Helium-4 is cooled down to 4.2 K, the macroscopic phase coherent state is developed, and then superfluidity appears. This state is considered to be due to Bose-Einstain condensation of helium atom. Shear modulus:【せん断弾性率】is a quantity of the stiffness of materials, which is concerned with the deformation of a solid when the strain applies along parallel to the surface of the material. Trsional oscillator:【ねじれ振り子】 is a sort of pendulum. Schematic view of torsional oscillator is shown in the figure. Torsion head including sample space is supported the torsion rod. Torsion head swing back and forth around central axixs by external force applied on the oscillator. The natural resonant frequency is , where K is modulus of rigidity of the bob and I is the rotational inertia of the head. Vycor glass: 【バイコールガラス】is a typical porous glass in which nanopores are formed as an interconnected network. 54 Speaker: Christine GUERLIN Laboratoire Kastler Brossel I - Introduction Superfluidity has a very special status within the states of matter: it is indeed a direct manifestation, at a macroscopic scale, of quantum physics. Usual fluid properties, like “how does it flow”, are deeply modified. Underlying this global behaviour , the quantum basis is to be found in the microscopic behaviour of its constituents, e.g. atoms: it is when they all behave like a single wave and become indistinguishable that superfluidity arises. Beyond arising in liquids, like 4He, or gases, superfluidity can also occur in a solid. This is a priori more puzzling: atoms would then be at the same time arranged spatially with a definite pattern, and delocalized over all the pattern sites. Theoretically predicted in the 70s, quest for experimental observation of this state has been looked for mainly in solid 4He. In parallel to “natural” many-body quantum systems such as 4He at low temperature or superconductors, atomic trapping and cooling techniques allow nowadays to engineer artificial many-body systems. Bose-Einstein condensation, achieved for the first time in 1995, arises when a very dilute atomic gas is cooled down to a temperature typically lower than 10-6 K: atoms then all condense in the same wavefunction. As seen above, this forms a superfluid, as has been experimentally shown in particular by observation of vortices [1]. This system has several advantages. Excellent control over the system, combined with a large extension of the wavefunction, allows direct optical access to it. In addition, parameters become tunable: density, as well as interaction type and strengths, can be freely engineered. It becomes now possible to “simulate” various many body problems and phase diagrams. Recently, implementations of supersolidity have been investigated theoretically and experimentally (see e.g. [2] for a recent review), allowing an approach in a sense complementary to 4He experiments: it opens a window on the microscopic properties of the system and could help clearing out which of them are crucial for a supersolid to exist. II - Content of talk The experiment I will present is realized with a 87Rb Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC). This atomic species has normally weak interatomic interactions, but effective long-range interactions -needed to for supersolid ground state to replace the homogeneous ground state can be mediated via interaction with light. This is achieved byhomogeneous trapping the BEC in the of a small microns) optical cavity, tuned off-resonance near an state ofcenter the BEC, and (180 a self-organized state where atoms are arranged onatomic a transition frequency. While shining laser on their the atoms, we have observed a cross-over between of an the homocheckerboard pattern, while akeeping superfluidity. By recording the shadow geneous of the and acamera, self-organized state whereaccess atoms both are arranged a checkerboard pattern, atomicstate cloud on BEC, a CCD one has direct to the on shape of the atomic while keeping theirand superfluidity. By recordingbetween the shadow of the atomic a CCD camera, wavefunction to the coherence different patterncloud sites.on We were ableone to has direct access both to the shape of the atomic wavefunction and to the coherence between different pattern reconstruct the superfluid/supersolid phase diagram in excellent agreement with ab initio sites. We were able to reconstruct superfluid/supersolid diagram the in excellent with ab theoretical calculations [3]. the Further investigationsphase elucidated role ofagreement elementary 4 initio theoretical calculations [3]. Further investigations elucidated the role of elementary excitations in this excitations in this transition [4], in analogy to liquid He. 4 transition [4], in analogy to liquid He. III – Conclusions 55 This talk will allow to present a different (microscopic) approach to supersolidity, and a III - Conclusions This talk will allow to present a different (microscopic) approach to supersolidity, and a glimpse into the world of cold atom physics, which can form and explore very “pure” quantum states, illustrating elementary quantum behaviours or tackling the edges of our complex systems's understanding. IV - References [1] K. Madison, F. Chevy, V. Bretin and J. Dalibar, Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, p. 4443 (2001) [2] M. Boninsegni, N.V. Pprokof'ev, Rev. Mod. Phys. 84, P. 759 (2012) [3] K. Baumann, C. Guerlin, F. Brennecke and T. Esslinger, Nature 464, p. 1301 (2010) [4] R. Mottl, F. Brennecke, R. Landig, T. Donner, 56 SESSION VI session Field LIFE/MEDICAL SCIENCE session TITLE PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS/DEFINITIONS AND TREATMENTS 57 SESSION VI Life/Medical Science Psychiatric disorders: definitions and treatments Chair: Véronique DEROCHE-GAMONET Physiopathology of addiction, Inserm U862, Bordeaux, France The session deals with two major issues of psychiatry, i.e. definitions of disorders and treatment, the former impacting the latter, obviously. Nosography is perpetually revised underlying the difficulty of producing absolute definitions of psychiatric disorders; one of the reasons being that diagnosis criteria are largely subjective. Dr Takahashi and Mallet present neuroscience tools and methods, which when combined, allow obtaining objective psychobiological signatures of psychiatric disorders. Those signatures guide the choice of reliable targets and strategies for treatment. Dr Mallet exemplifies how a deeper knowledge of the neurobiology of Obsessive Compulsive Disorders leads to a rationale therapeutic application of Deep brain stimulation (DBS). Dr Takahashi also introduces the concept of dimensional transnosographic approach of psychiatric disorders, echoing the recent Research Domain Criteria project (RDoC) of the NIMH. Distinct psychiatric disorders share common alterations in some key psychological dimensions, e.g. decision-making. Dr Takahashi shows how studying the neurobiology of impaired decision-making across neuropsychiatric disorders can improve our understanding of this pathological trait and its contribution to the concerned disorders, further specifying their definition. Finally, using the example of drug addiction, my own contribution will be to discuss why proper definitions of psychiatric disorders also condition the development of valid preclinical models and hence the identification of pertinent therapeutic targets, for a reliable translation to humans. In summary, properly defining psychiatric disorders is neither obvious nor trivial, but instead an important and timely issue. Cutting-edge neuroscience tools and methods are now available, which create the conditions for a renewal of biological psychiatry. I - References Deroche-Gamonet, V., Belin, D., Piazza, P.V., 2004. Evidence for addiction-like behavior in the rat. Science 305, 1014–1017. Kasanetz F*, Deroche-Gamonet V*, Berson N, Balado E, Lafourcade M, Manzoni O, Piazza PV. Transition to addiction is associated with a persistent impairment in synaptic plasticity. Science, 2010, 328(5986):1709-12. *equal contribution. Kasanetz F*, Lafourcade M*, Deroche-Gamonet V*, Revest JM, Berson N, Balado E, Fiancette JF, Renault P, Piazza PV, Manzoni OJ. Prefrontal synaptic markers of cocaine addiction-like behavior in rats. Mol Psychiatry, 2013, 18(6):729-737. *equal contribution. Cannella N, Halbout B, Uhrig S, Evrard L, Corsi M, Corti C, Deroche-Gamonet V, Hansson AC, Spanagel R. The mGluR2/3 agonist LY379268 induced anti-reinstatement effects in rats exhibiting addiction-like behavior. Neuropsychopharmacology, 2013, Apr 29. doi: 10.1038/npp.2013.106. Belin D, Berson N, Balado E, Piazza PV, Deroche-Gamonet V. High-novelty-preference rats are predisposed to compulsive cocaine self-administration. Neuropsychopharmacology, 2011, 36(3):569-79. Belin D, Balado E, Piazza PV, Deroche-Gamonet V. Pattern of Intake and Drug Craving Predict the Development of Cocaine Addiction-like Behavior in Rats. Biol Psychiatry, 2009, 65(10): 863-8. 58 II - Glossary of the session • Addiction: Addiction is the continued repetition of a behavior despite adverse consequences, or a psychiatric disorder leading to such behaviors. Addictions can include drugs of abuse, food, sex, internet and gambling. • ADHD: Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a psychiatric disorder. Typical symptoms of ADHD are difficulty in sustaining attention, hyperactivity and impulsive behavior. • Behavioral economics: The field of economics that studies the effects of social, cognitive, and emotional factors on the economic decisions of individuals. • Biological psychiatry: It is a school of psychiatric thought aims to understand mental disorders in terms of the biological function of the nervous system. Its detractors blame it for emphasizing the relationship between behavior and brain function, for searching exclusively for physical causes to mental illnesses and for focusing the treatment of mental disorders on medication. • Functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI): A noninvasive method for imaging brain activity that uses imaging pulse sequences generated by an MRI scanner. The signal measured is caused by hemoglobin-based changes. • Neuroeconomics: Neuroeconomics is an interdisciplinary field that combines research methods from neuroscience, experimental and behavioral economics, and cognitive and social psychology to explain human decision making. • Neurotransmitter: Communication between neurons is achieved through release of small molecules called neurotransmitters from the pre-synaptic neuron. This chemical signal diffuses across a synaptic cleft to interact with specific receptors on the post-synaptic neuron in order to elicit a biochemical response. • Neurotransmitter receptors: A receptor is a molecule usually found on the surface of a neuron that receives chemical signals from pre-synaptic neurons. • Neurotransmitter transporters: A transporter located on the pre-synaptic neuron terminal reuptakes released neurotransmitter and terminates synaptic transmission. • NIMH: “National Institute of Mental Health is part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The NIMH Intramural division plans and conducts basic, clinical, and translational research to advance understanding of the diagnosis, causes, treatment, and prevention of mental disorders through the study of brain function and behavior.” (http://www.nimh.nih.gov/index. shtml). • Nosography: Nosography is the systematic description of diseases. DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders – American Psychiatric Association) and ICD (International Classification of Diseases – World Health Organization) are the two main classifications describing psychiatric disorders based on series of symptoms. “For each disorder, a set of diagnostic criteria indicate what symptoms must be present (and for how long), as well as symptoms, disorders, and conditions that must not be present to qualify for a particular diagnosis” (DSM, http://www.psych.org/practice/dsm). • Positron emission tomography (PET): PET involves the use of an imaging device (PET scanner) and a radiotracer that is injected into the patient’s bloodstream. Once the radiotracer accumulates in the body’s tissues and organs, its natural decay includes emission of positrons that react with electrons in the body. This reaction produces energy in the form of a pair of photons. The PET scanner, which is able to detect these photons, creates three-dimensional images that show how the radiotracer is distributed in the area of the body being studied. • Research Domain Criteria (RDoC): “Strategy 1.4 of the NIMH Strategic Plan calls for the development, for research purposes, of new ways of classifying psychopathology based on dimensions of observable behavior and neurobiological measures. The Research Domain Criteria project (RDoC) has been launched by NIMH to 59 implement this strategy. In brief, the effort is to define basic dimensions of functioning (such as fear circuitry or working memory) to be studied across multiple units of analysis, from genes to neural circuits to behaviors, cutting across disorders as traditionally defined. The intent is to translate rapid progress in basic neurobiological and behavioral research to an improved integrative understanding of psychopathology and the development of new and/or optimally matched treatments for mental disorders.” (http://www.nimh.nih.gov/research-priorities/rdoc/index.shtml). • Synapse: In the nervous system, a synapse is a structure that permits a neuron to pass an electrical or chemical signal to another neuron. • Transnosographic: From nosography. It means “common to distinct diseases”. It is applied to describe psychological traits, symptoms, research strategies (e.g. RDoC). Speaker: Hidehiko TAKAHASHI Kyoto University Understanding and defining phenotype of psychiatric disorders. I - Department of Psychiatry, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine Dysfunction of emotions and decision-making can be observed in various forms of psychiatric disorders. However, assessment and diagnosis of psychiatric disorders has been based on self-report or superficial observation of patients’ behaviors. The topics about emotion and decision-making have been traditionally dealt with various discipline including humanities and social sciences. With the dissemination of non-invasive human neuroimaging techniques and the advancement of cognitive science and computational sciences, neuroscience studies focusing on emotions and decision-making have become established as a file of social neuroscience and computational neurosciences. The emerging fields of neuroscience will greatly contribute to clinical psychiatry. I will introduce our recent interdisciplinary neuroscience approach combining neuroimaging techniques (functional MRI; fMRI and positron emission tomography: PET), cognitive sciences, economics, pharmacology and engineering to assees, define and understand altered decision-making in neuropsychiatric disorders. An interdisciplinary approach will provide new perspectives for understanding the neurobiology of impaired decision-making in neuropsychiatric disorders and their drug development. II - References Yamada M, Uddin LQ, Takahashi H, Kimura Y, Takahata K, Kousa R, Ikoma Y, Eguchi Y, Takano H, Ito H, Higuchi M, Suhara T. Superiority illusion arises from resting-state brain networks modulated by dopamine. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. (2013) 110(11):4363-7. Takahashi H. Monoamines and assessment of risks. Curr Opin Neurobiol (2012)22(6):1062-7 Takahashi H, Takano H, Camerer C, Ideno T, Okubo S, Matsui H, Tamari Y, Takemura K, Arakawa R, Yamada M, Eguchi Y, Murai T, Okubo Y, Kato M, Ito H, Suhara T. Honesty mediates the relationship between serotonin and reaction to unfairness. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2012) 109(11):4281-4284 Takahashi H, Fujie S, Camerer C, Arakawa R, Takano H, Kodaka F, Matsui H, Ideno T, Okubo S, Takemura K, Yamada M, Eguchi Y, Murai T, Okubo Y, Kato M, Ito H, Suhara T. Norepinephrine in the brain is associated with aversion to financial loss. Mol Psychiatry (2013) 18:3-4 Takahashi H, Matsui H, Camerer CF, Takano H, Kodaka F, Ideno T, S Okubo S, Takemura K, Arakawa R, Eguchi Y, Murai T, Okubo Y, Kato M, Ito H, Suhara T. Dopamine D1 receptors and nonlinear probability weighting in risky choice. J Neurosci (2010) 30(49):16567-16572. Takahashi H, Kato M, Matsuura M, Mobbs D, Suhara T, Okubo Y: When Your Gain is my Pain and Your Pain is my Gain: Neural Correlates of Envy and Schadenfreude. Science (2009) 323: 937-939 60 《Psychiatric disorders: definitions and treatments》 Glossary Addiction【依存】: Addiction is the continued repetition of a behavior despite adverse consequences, or a psychiatric disorder leading to such behaviors. Addictions can include addiction, food, sex, internet and gambling. ADHD【注意欠陥多動性障害】: Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a psychiatric disorder. Typical symptoms of ADHD are difficulty in sustaining attention, hyperactivity and impulsive behavior. Behavioral economics【行動経済学】: The field of economics that studies the effects of social, cognitive, and emotional factors on the economic decisions of individuals. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) 【機能的MRI】: A noninvasive method for imaging brain activity that uses imaging pulse sequences generated by an MRI scanner. The signal measured is caused by hemoglobin-based changes. Neuroeconomics【神経経済学】: Neuroeconomics is an interdisciplinary field that combines research methods from neuroscience, experimental and behavioral economics, and cognitive and social psychology to explain human decision making. Neurotransmitter【神経伝達物質】: Communication between neurons is achieved through release of small molecules called neurotransmitters from the pre-synaptic neuron. This chemical signal diffuses across a synaptic cleft to interact with specific receptors on the post-synaptic neuron in order to elicit a biochemical response. Neurotransmitter receptors【神経伝達物質受容体】: A receptor is a molecule usually found on the surface of a neuron that receives chemical signals from pre-synaptic neurons. Neurotransmitter transporters 【神経伝達物質トランスポーター】 : A transporter located on the pre-synaptic neuron terminal reuptakes released neurotransmitter and terminates synaptic transmission. Positron emission tomography (PET) 【陽電子放射断層撮影】 :PET involves the use of an imaging device (PET scanner) and a radiotracer that is injected into the patient’s bloodstream. Once the radiotracer accumulates in the body’s tissues and organs, its natural decay includes emission of positrons that react with electrons in the body. This reaction produces energy in the form of a pair of photons. The PET scanner, which is able to detect these photons, creates three-dimensional images that show how the radiotracer is distributed in the area of the body being studied. Synapse【シナプス】: In the nervous system, a synapse is a structure that permits a neuron to pass an electrical or chemical signal to another neuron. 61 Speaker: Luc Mallet ICM – Brain & Spine Institute Paris I - Introduction Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is able to target with precision specific cerebral networks, thus offering hope for severe and treatment refractory illnesses, as well as to investigate in the detail the subcortical bases. II - Content of talk In obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), DBS is being tested at several nodes of a prefrontal¬subcortical circuit, including the subthalamic nucleus (STN). Functional imaging studies of OCD patients have shown abnormal metabolic activity of the orbito-frontal and cingulate cortices, as well as of the anterior part of the striatum. In animal and human studies, these structures have been associated with performance-monitoring and more generally metacognitive processes, thus suggesting that metacognitive dysfunctions might be central to OCD leading to pathological doubt. In this conceptual framework of hyperactive distrust metacognitive mechanism in OCD, checking behaviour can be regarded as an ill-founded metacognitive strategy designed to restore confidence in the outcome of one’s actions. Within the basal ganglia network, the STN could act a crucial part in this process regarding its role in the inhibitory control of behaviour. Moreover, anatomy and neuro-computational models of the basal ganglia show that this nucleus is in the position to implement cortical metacognitive control by increasing the threshold for decision. III - Conclusions This framework has the advantage of providing a theoretical basis to the promising clinical results obtained for STN-DBS in severe resistant OCD. Bearing in mind this model, it can be postulated that DBS, by its action on STN, positively interferes with the neural mechanism underlying compulsive behaviour. IV - References Baunez, C., Yelnik, J., & Mallet, L. (2011). Six questions on the subthalamic nucleus: lessons from animal models and from stimulated patients. Neuroscience, 198, 193–204. doi:10.1016/j.neuroscience.2011.09.059 Burbaud, P., Clair, A.-H., Langbour, N., Fernandez-Vidal, S., Goillandeau, M., Michelet, T., et al. (2013). Neuronal activity correlated with checking behaviour in the subthalamic nucleus of patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder. Brain, 136(Pt 1), 304–317. doi:10.1093/brain/aws306 Chamberlain, S. R., Menzies, L., Hampshire, A., Suckling, J., Fineberg, N. A., del Campo, N., et al. (2008). Orbitofrontal dysfunction in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder and their unaffected relatives. Science, 321(5887), 421–422. doi:10.1126/science.1154433 Clair, A. H., N'Diaye, K., Baroukh, T., Pochon, J. B., MOrgiève, M., Hantouche, E., et al. (2012). Excessive checking for non-anxiogenic stimuli in obsessive-compulsive disorder. European Psychiatry, 1–7. doi:10.1016/j.eurpsy.2012.11.003 Figee, M., Luigjes, J., Smolders, R., Valencia-Alfonso, C.-E., van Wingen, G., de Kwaasteniet, B., et al. (2013). Deep brain stimulation restores frontostriatal network activity in obsessive-compulsive disorder. Nature Publishing Group, 16(4), 386–387. doi:10.1038/nn.3344 Haynes, W. I. A., & Mallet, L. (2010). High-frequency stimulation of deep brain structures in obsessive-compulsive disorder: the search for a valid circuit. European Journal of Neuroscience, 32(7), 1118–1127. doi:10.1111/ j.1460-9568.2010.07418.x Hermans, D., Engelen, U., Grouwels, L., Joos, E., Lemmens, J., & Pieters, G. (2008). Cognitive confidence in obsessive-compulsive disorder: distrusting perception, attention and memory. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 46(1), 98–113. doi:10.1016/j.brat.2007.11.001 Le Jeune, F., Vérin, M., N'Diaye, K., Drapier, D., Leray, E., Montcel, Du, S. T., et al. (2010). Decrease of prefrontal metabolism after subthalamic stimulation in obsessive-compulsive disorder: a positron emission tomography study. Biol Psychiatry, 68(11), 1016–1022. Mallet, L., Polosan, M., Jaafari, N., Baup, N., Welter, M. L., Fontaine, D., et al. (2008). Subthalamic nucleus 62 stimulation in severe obsessive-compulsive disorder. New England Journal of Medicine, 359(20), 2121–2134. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa0708514 Mallet, L., Schupbach, M., N'Diaye, K., Remy, P., Bardinet, E., Czernecki, V., et al. (2007). Stimulation of subterritories of the subthalamic nucleus reveals its role in the integration of the emotional and motor aspects of behavior. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 104(25), 10661–10666. Welter, M. L., Burbaud, P., Fernandez-Vidal, S., Bardinet, E., Coste, J., Piallat, B., et al. (2011). Basal ganglia dysfunction in OCD: subthalamic neuronal activity correlates with symptoms severity and predicts high-frequency stimulation efficacy. Transl Psychiatry, 1, e5. doi:10.1038/tp.2011.5 V - Glossary: • Basal ganglia: group of subcortical grey nuclei located in the depth of the cerebral hemispheres, interconnected with the cerebral cortex, thalamus and brainstem, and associated with a variety of functions: motor control, cognition, emotions, and learning. • Deep Brain Stimulation: DBS consists of stereotactic implantation of electrodes in deep brain structures. The electrodes are connected by a sub-cutaneous cable to an implantable electric stimulator enabling the application of high frequency (80-180Hz) current to the target structure. The effect of the stimulation is reversible and the various stimulation parameters (frequency, pulse width and voltage) are adjusted in order to obtain the best possible results in the absence of undesirable side-effects and low morbidity. • Metacognitive monitoring: the ability to evaluate one’s own cognitive functions. • Obsessive-Compulsive disorder: anxiety disorder characterized by recurrent, unwanted thoughts (obsessions) and/or repetitive behaviors (compulsions). Repetitive behaviors such as handwashing, counting, checking, or cleaning are often performed with the hope of preventing obsessive thoughts or making them go away. Performing these so-called "rituals," however, provides only temporary relief, and not performing them markedly increases anxiety. • Stereotaxis: relating to or denoting techniques for surgical treatment or scientific investigation that uses medical imaging to precisely locate in three dimensions an anatomical site to which a surgical instrument or a beam of radiation is directed. 63 SESSION VII session Field SOCIAL SCIENCES/HUMANITIES session TITLE HAPPINESS 65 SESSION VII Social Sciences/Humanities Happiness Chair: Claire ETCHEGARAY Institut de Recherches Philosophiques (Université Paris 10) I - Introduction A basic contradiction lies at the core of philosophical research on happiness: on the one hand, this notion is indeterminate and on the other hand, it is indispensable. Admittedly, happiness stems from perfect satisfaction. But none of the particular desired objects could ever afford such satisfaction, termed in French “bonheur”, because this means complete well-being. Thus, we first recall the paradox of satisfaction with which any hedonism is faced. Satisfaction is temporary (if not precarious) because the desire itself seems to be renewed by pleasure or well-being. This is further complicated by the fact that what is satisfying in one way can be dissatisfying in another way. Nevertheless, happiness seems to be an indispensable concept for the theory of action. However incomplete the pursuit of happiness may be, it is taken for granted that an action is motivated by some intended good. Whatever this good, does it not bring happiness itself? But equating goodness with happiness is problematic too. One argument against it might be that moral goodness must be defined independently of any consideration of happiness. However even Kant, the most famous figure in the history of philosophy, who defended strong deontologism, did not deny that a virtuous man must believe that he deserves happiness and so believe in the possibility of post-mortem recompense if there is a just Almighty. II - Content of talk This leads to different lines of enquiry in the philosophy of action and in moral philosophy. Taking moral philosophy first, we shall recall the debate between the deontological point of view and consequentialism1. One version of the latter is utilitarianism, i.e. the defence of utility maximization as a practical criterion. Yet recently, other options have been explored. “Virtue Ethics” argues that the moral end is neither acting out of moral duty, nor acting in order to obtain the greatest good (be it pleasure or profit, personal or collective), but that personal perfection which is an achievement of humanity in each self. The definition of happiness changes with these options. It is an imaginary reward motivating action but not virtue itself for the deontologist, an optimised benefit for the utilitarian, well-being as the realisation of the nature or the capacities of an agent for the philosopher promoting virtue ethics. In France, we have recently seen the defence of so-called “minimalist ethics” as a way of saving moral philosophy from its tendency (in the Western tradition) to be paternalistic. In such a view, morality does not consist in making oneself or others happy, but only in avoiding harming others (Ogien, 2007). In all these approaches, researchers draw on the history of philosophy. Thus, one challenge presented by the readings of Aristotle in “Virtue Ethics” is to conceptualise the good life without subscribing to a straightforward and naïve naturalism. Another example can be found in the interpretation of Scottish philosophers (like Hutcheson, Hume and Smith), or the classical utilitarians (Bentham and Stuart Mill) in order to conceive of calculating good in a purely instrumental way. Secondly, we shall turn to the question “how do we look for happiness?”. In part, the philosophy of action aims at questioning the rationality of deliberation, decision and action. But in addition, any current philosophical theory of action must include some theory of “weakness of the will” (akrasia in greek), i.e. it must account for the fact that sometimes, however desirable an action may be for us (even more desirable than any other in given circumstances) and however much we may believe that this is the action that we must perform, we do not do it. 1 Consequentialism and its Critics, dir. Samuel Schaeffer, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1988 66 III - Conclusions Finally, we shall consider two philosophical approaches that cross into other sciences and question notions of welfare and quality of life. In the philosophy of medicine, there is a certain French focus on the relationship between welfare and health, as well as on issues of biotechnological enhancement (Nordenfelt, 2001). In political philosophy, the “capabilities approach” claims that we need to seek institutional guarantees of the material conditions necessary for the development of human capabilities as the basis for some principles of justice, rather than founding the theory of just governance on subjective welfarism or on objective utilitarian measures of happiness (PIB, income, etc.) (Sen, 2009 and Nussbaum, 2011). IV - References Lennart Nordenfelt, « On the Goals of Medicine, Health Enhancement and Social Welfare », in Health Care Analyses, 9, 1, 2001, pp. 15-23 ; Action, Ability and Health. Essays in the Philosophy of Action and Welfare, Dordrecht, Kluwer Academic Publisher, 2000, Fr. tr. of « Ability and Health » by Denis Forest and Marion Le Bidan in Textes clés de philosophie de la médecine, Paris, Vrin, 2012 Martha Nussbaum, Creating Capabilities. The Human Development Approach, Cambridge MA, Harvard University Press, 2011, Fr. tr. Capabilités. Comment créer les conditions d’un monde plus juste ?, Paris, Flammarion, 2012 Ruwen Ogien, L’éthique aujourd’hui. Maximalistes et minimalistes, Paris, Gallimard, 2007 Amartya Sen, The Idea of Justice, London, Penguin, 2009, Fr. tr. L’idée de justice, Paris, Champs Essais, 2010 V - Glossary • Consequentialism: a theory holding that any action is evaluated according to the results, and not to the nature, of the act or to the intention behind the act. One kind of consequentialism holds that the value of an action depends on the satisfaction procured by its results. • Deontologism: a theory holding that the value of any action is that it performs or intends to perform what it has to perform according to any rational law or moral duty (worthing independently to any sensible pleasure or particular interest). In the history of philosophy, Immanuel Kant is the major figure in this approach. • Hedonism: theory holding that the value of action is pleasure, or some kind of pleasure which is more constant, or less complicated by pain. In the history of philosophy, Epicurus is the major figure in this ethics. • Utilitarianism: theory holding that the value of action is to maximize utility and thence happiness. As such, it does not only prescribe an ethics of pleasure (implying the regulation of pleasure) but also a rational calculation of the way to reach “the greatest good for the greatest number”. It is a kind of consequentialism. • Welfarism: 1/ In moral philosophy, a theory which argues that the justificatory force of any moral reason is that it procures well-being, 2/ In social sciences and economics, any approach holding that social well-being is a political goal to be determined taking into account the expression of individual preferences. • Capabilities approach: a theory, mainly held by Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum, that any social and political conception of justice must stem from reflection on the quality of life. Sen and Nussbaum denounce welfarism (in sense 2/), pointing out that painful conditions of life can lead to an adaptation of individual desires and preferences such that declarations of self-satisfaction can be in disaccordance with the actual quality of life. According to them, the economics of development need to define some fundamental conditions of the human good life, that is, define the conditions in which human capabilities can be developed. 67 Speaker: Maya BACACHE-BEAUVALLET Professor, economics, Telecom ParisTech I - Introduction The economics of happiness or happiness economics is a challenging and emerging field of research. Economists traditionally focused on objective and measurable concepts such as well being, income, wealth, health, etc. Since the late nineties economists (Easterlin, Frey, Oswald) have combined sociology, psychology and cognitive sciences’ inputs and tried to tackle the subjective issue of happiness. The field has grown and used advanced methods to measure happiness. II - Content of talk The main problem is to measure such a subjective concept: it is difficult to compare levels of happiness across individuals and across culture. However, despite this methodological difficulty, economists have demonstrated consistent patterns across time and countries. We shall review those patterns The economics of happiness tries to resolve puzzles such as: the increasing income and yet non increasing happiness, the objective and positive effects of globalization and yet increased unhappiness linked to globalization, etc. This approach has also shed light on irrational behavior such as addictive behavior or excessive consumption. III - References Alesina, A., Di Tella, R. and MacCulloch, R. (2004). “Inequality and happiness: Are Europeans and Americans different?”. Journal of Public Economics, 88, 2009–2042. Alpizar, F., Carlsson, F. and Johansson-Stenman, O. (2005). "How much do we care about absolute versus relative income and consumption?". Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 56, 405-421. Blanchflower, D.G. et Oswald, A.J. (2004). “Well-being over time in Britain and the USA”. Journal of Public Economics, 88, 1359-1386. Clark, A.E., Etilé, F., Postel-Vinay, F., Senik, C., et Van der Straeten, K. (2005). Heterogeneity in reported wellbeing: Evidence from twelve European countries. Economic Journal, 115, C118-C132. Di Tella, R. et MacCulloch, R. (2006). Some uses of happiness data in economics. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 20, 25-46. Di Tella, R. MacCulloch, R. et Oswald, A.J. (2003). The macroeconomics of happiness. Review of Economics and Statistics, 85, 809–827. Easterlin R., 1974, « Does Economic Growth Improve the Human Lot ? Some Empirical Evidence », in P.A. David et M.W. Reder, eds, Nations et Households in Economic Growth, p 89-125, New-York, Academic Press. Easterlin R., 2001, « Income et Happiness : Towards a Unified Theory », The Economic Journal, 111, 465-484. Easterlin, Richard A. (2003). “Explaining Happiness”, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Vol. 100, No. 19, September 16. Kahneman, D. et Krueger, A.B. (2006). Developments in the measurement of subjective wellbeing. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 22, 3-24. Kahneman, Daniel, Ed Diener, and Norbert Schwarz (1999). Well-being: The Foundations of Hedonic Psychology (New York: Russell Sage). Oswald, Andrew (1997). “Happiness and Economic Performance” . The Economic Journal, Vol. 107, No. 445, pp.1815–31. 68 Speaker: Takashi KURATA The Research Institute for Humanity and Nature I - Introduction What is the "happiness" for us who live in the modern society? In order to answer this question, I would like to think our personal happiness in consideration of the characteristic points of the present age, especially thinking how we regard the global environmental issues for our society. Almost five decades already passed, since such issues became to be shared socially. In the meantime, focusing on their social position there has been some turning points in a cycle of about 20 years. We can consider the first two decades (1970s-80s) as the 1st generation, the second (1990s-2000s) as the 2nd generation and now, namely the 20 years beginning from 2010 as the 3rd generation. This classification does not just depend on counting years, but corresponds with the change of subjective impression or consciousness of the environmental issues for our society Roughly saying, we can characterize using simple keyword's, them for the 1st generation as COUNTER, for the 2nd as TREND and for the 3rd as NORMAL. II - 1st Generation and 2nd Generation The 1st generation was the time of counter culture. The environmental pollution by industrialization and the destruction of nature by development getting more and more serious, the problem in the global level began to attract social interest in the beginning of 1970s. At that time, economic activities including urbanization were severely criticized as opposition to environmental protection. Indeed there was a rise of environmental awareness but it had a tendency to anti-power and anti-establishment and was never mainstream. The people who had an environmental intention were minority in the society to the last. While the enthusiastic minority sought after the lifestyle harmonized with nature in the 1st generation, being conscious of the environment no longer had any anti-power meaning but became to be main stream or trend in the 2nd generation Global environmental issues achieved the position of main topics for politics and the consideration for them from industries to families The people with ecological mind lived not in the countryside but in the urban area. The environmental protection seemed to get reconciled with economic activities, as it was symbolized in the case of hybrid cars. What can these generations be considered as the theme of subjectivity? The environmental consciousness is essentially contrary to the economic activity, because the latter seeks for its own benefit in principle, while the former fundamentally tries to benefit the others, namely the other people we unconsciously oppress in daily consumption or the other nature which is different from humankinds. Here is the opposition between self-interest or egoism and altruism, which is essential criteria for the subjective decision of behavior. The 1st generation tried to oppose to the selfish economic activity, and aimed at altruism. Although it seems that the 2nd generation succeeded in the mediation between the both sides, it exactly realized the complacency for the trend-oriented selfish desire. Such divided situation in the mind of the 2nd generation people might have promoted the absence of the subjectivity as a result. III - 3rd Generation Félix Guattari's "Les trois écologies (the three ecologies)" (1989) is small but important in that it suggests the direction of the 3rd generation. In Guattari’s view, we need to take account not just of the conventional kind of ecology, the "environmental ecology", for natural environment but of the "social ecology" and also the "mental ecology" in order to conquer the ecological unbalance with which our modern society is faced, and to establish the new sort of knowledge, "eco sophie", which should connect these three ecologies. The three ecologies presented by Guattari could be applied to the three generations mentioned above. The 1st generation as COUNTER sometimes turned the back to human society, and intended to be just within nature so that it might be seen in the case of deep ecology. In this point, this generation can be said to solely look for the "environmental ecology". On the other hand, although being a shallow style as TREND, the 2nd generation widely intended the "social ecology", in the respect that it has been aiming at sharing the environmental problem with the society as a whole. In this context, such task will be referred to the 3rd generation as how 69 to be able to introduce the "mental ecology" into the environmental arguments. After passing through two contrastive generations, the 3rd aims at the new way of subjective behavior. It is NORMAL. IV -Conclusion NORMAL is an integration, a sublation or a moderation of the former two generations, because the environmental consciousness remains for our whole society as the 2nd, and tries to be much deeper than just one item of TREND, looking for a real social change. In considering the subjectivity of this generation, I would like to take up here the thought of the “Mingei”, the Japanese Folk Crafts movement since the beginning of 20th century, which has been prevailing again among Japanese people, especially young generation of designers or artists since around 2000. What Mingei aims at is “the mediocre, the ordinary, the plural, the public and the common world nobody monopolizes” (YANAGI 1941). It’s easy to grasp a resonance between Mingei and the 3rd generation mentioned here. But the point is that there is, behind this resonance, some desire for a sensitivity of the importance of our normal daily life. I would like to name such sensitivity “intimateness” with one’s own life and society and to consider that creating and sharing this intimateness is the happiness for our generation. V - References Félix GUATTARI, “Les trois écologies“, Paris, 1989. Muneyoshi YANAGI, “Mingei towa nanika (What is Mingei?)”, Tokyo, 1941. 70 《Happiness》 Glossary Altruism:【利他主義】is the principle or practice of concern for the welfare of others. Capabilities approach:a theory, mainly held by Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum, that any social and political conception of justice must stem from reflection on the quality of life. Sen and Nussbaum denounce welfarism (in sense 2/), pointing out that painful conditions of life can lead to an adaptation of individual desires and preferences such that declarations of self-satisfaction can be in disaccordance with the actual quality of life. According to them, the economics of development need to define some fundamental conditions of the human good life, that is, define the conditions in which human capabilities can be developed. Consequentialism : a theory holding that any action is evaluated according to the results, and not to the nature, of the act or to the intention behind the act. One kind of consequentialism holds that the value of an action depends on the satisfaction procured by its results. Deep ecology :【 デ ィ ー プ ・ エ コ ロ ジ ー 】 is a contemporary ecological and environmental philosophy characterized by its advocacy of the inherent worth of living beings regardless of their instrumental utility to human needs. It aims at radical restructure of modern human societies, based on the idea of fundamental criticism on humanism. Deontologism : a theory holding that the value of any action is that it performs or intends to perform what it has to perform according to any rational law or moral duty (worthing independently to any sensible pleasure or particular interest). In the history of philosophy, Immanuel Kant is the major figure in this approach. Ecosophie: 【エコソフィ・環境知】("ecosophy" in English) is neologism focusing on the new type of knowledge, formed by contracting the phrase ecological philosophy. The most famous examples are that of the Norwegian father of deep ecology, Arne Næss (1912-2009), and that of French postmodern philosopher and psychoanalyst, Félix Guattari (1930-1992). 71 Egoism: 【利己主義】is placing concern with oneself or one’s owan interests above the well-being or interests of others. Hedonism: theory holding that the value of action is pleasure, or some kind of pleasure which is more constant, or less complicated by pain. In the history of philosophy, Epicurus is the major figure in this ethics. Mingei:【民藝】(Min "folk" + gei "craft" in Japanese) is the Japanese folk crafts movement, which was developed by Japanese philosopher, Muneyoshi Yanagi (1889-1961) and his sworm friends in the beginning of 20th century in Japan. The philosophical pillar of Mingei is reevaluation of hand-crafted art for ordinary people and complete reform of daily lifestyle in modern societies. Moderation: 【中庸】is a principle of life, eliminating or lessing extremes and ensuring normality. Normal:【ふつう】is the one of key concepts for modern product design. Japanese product designer, Naoto Fukazawa, who was installed in the position of director of Nihon Mingei-kan (the Japan Folk Crafts Museum) in 2012, selected the typical items for modern daily life with English product and furniture designer, Jasper Morrison, and exhibited them under the name "Super-Normal" in 2006. Subjectivity: 【主体性】is a term used to refer to the condition of being a subject : i.e., the quality of a subject’s perspective, experiences, feelings, beliefs, and desires. Subjectivity is used as an explanation for what influences and informs people’s judgments about truth ore rality. Sublation: 【止揚】is a translation of German term "Aufheben" or "Aufhebung", which has several seemingly contradictory meanings, including "to lift up", "to abolish", or "to sublate". Especially in philosophy, aufheben is used by Hegel to explain what happens when a thesis and antithesis interact. 72 Curriculum vitÆ 73 First Name Dmitry Last Name ALDAKOV Position held Researcher Laboratory UMR 5819 Structure et Propriétés des Architectures Moléculaires (SPrAM) Address CEA-Grenoble INAC/SPrAM - 17 rue des Martyrs 38054 Grenoble cedex 9 Institution CNRS Tel + 33 6 14 04 25 68 Fax + 33 4 38 78 56 91 E.mail [email protected] URL http://inac.cea.fr/Pisp/dmitry.aldakov/ Participant category General Participant Session field Chemistry Session title Chemistry of "Origins of Life" Research field Solar cells, quantum dots, nanocrystals Statement of your research interests I develop solar cells of 3rd generation, which use inorganic quantum dots as light absorbers. More precisely, I am interested in development of non-toxic quantum dots and their attachment to the nanostructured electrodes. For this I develop new surface functionnalisation methods as well as new electrodes, QD surface passivation methods etc for more efficient solar cells. Recent most important publications 1. C. Chappaz-Gillot, S. Berson, R. Salazar, B. Lechêne, D. Aldakov, V. Delaye, S. Guillerez, and V. Ivanova "Polymer Solar Cells with Electrodeposited CuSCN Nanowires as New Efficient Hole Transporting Layer" Sol. Energy Mater. Sol. Cells, 2013, in press. 2. D. Aldakov, A. Lefrançois, and P. Reiss "Ternary and quaternary metal chalcogenide nanocrystals : synthesis, properties and applications" J. Mater. Chem. C, 2013, 1, 3756. 3. S. Sanchez, D. Aldakov, D. Rouchon, L. Rapenne, A. Delamoreanu, C. Lévy-Clément, and V. Ivanova "Sensitization of ZnO nanowire arrays with CuInS2 for extremely thin absorber solar cells" J. Renew. Sustain. Energy, 2013, 5, 011207. 4. D. Aldakov, D. Tondelier, S. Palacin, and Y. Bonnassieux "Ethanol-mediated metal transfer printing on organic films" ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces, 2011, 3, 740–5 5. D. Aldakov, T. Jiu, M. Zagorska, R. de Bettignies, P.-H. Jouneau, A. Pron, and F. Chandezon "Hybrid nanocomposites of CdSe nanocrystals distributed in complexing thiophene-based copolymers" Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2010, 12, 7497–505. Poster title Solar cells using quantum dots as light absorbers Poster abstract Novel non-toxic quantum dots (QDs) based on copper indium sulfide are used as light absorbers (sensitizers) in solar cells. The QDs are attached to the nanostructured TiO2 electrode or to ZnO nanowires by using recently patented linker molecules.We will discuss the influence of the surface and morphology of the components of the solar cells of this type on their performance. 74 First Name Christophe Last Name AMBROISE Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory UMR CNRS 8071 Statistique et Génome Address Institut de biologie génétique et bio-informatique 23 Boulevard de France, 91037 Evry cedex Institution Université d’Evry Val d’Essonne Tel 33 6 70 76 82 60 E.mail [email protected] URL http://stat.genopole.cnrs.fr/~cambroise/ Participant category PGM Session field Mathematics/Informatics Session title Bayesian Statistics Research field Statistics, Machine learning, mixture models, sparse regression, bio-informatics Statement of your research interests My research work is mainly concerned with supervised and unsupervised learning based on probabilistic models - Methods: mixture models, additive models, Gaussian Graphical Models Considered problems: clustering, network inference, association studies Applications: transcriptome analysis, regulation network inference, statistical genetics Recent most important publications 1. New consistent and asymptotically normal parameter estimates for random graph mixture models Ambroise, C. and Matias, C. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series B Vol. 74 No. 1 pp. 3-35 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/ 2. SHIPS: Spectral Hierarchical Clustering for the Inference of Population Structure in Genetic Studies Bouaziz, M. and Paccard, C. and Guedj, M. and Ambroise, C. PloS One Vol. 7 No. 10 pp. e45685 3. Variational Bayesian Inference and Complexity Control for Stochastic Block Models Latouche, P. and Birmelé, E. and Ambroise, C. Statistical Modelling Vol. 12 No. 1 pp. 93-115 http://arxiv.org/abs/0912.2873v2 75 First Name Alexandra Last Name Apostoluk Position held Researcher Laboratory INL UMR 5270 Institut des Nanotechnologies de Lyon Address INSA de Lyon Bâtiment Blaise Pascal - 7, avenue Jean Capelle 69621 VILLEURBANNE Cedex FRANCE Institution INSA Lyon Tel + 33 4 72 43 71 86 Fax + 33 4 72 43 81 35 E.mail [email protected] URL http://inl.cnrs.fr/ Participant category General Participant Session field Materials Science Session title Graphene, the "miracle material" Research field Semiconductors, nanomaterials, nanostructures, spectroscopy, solar cells, sensors Statement of your research interests I am interested in the studies of the properties of the heterostructures and nano-materials by means of optical spectroscopy. My current research projects concern the fabrication and structural and optical characterization of wide bandgap semiconducting nano-objects with controlled structures and functionalities for energy conversion, sensors and solar cell applications. Recent most important publications 1. ZnO dense nanowire array on a film structure in a single crystal domain texture for optical and photoelectrochemical applications, M. Zhong, Y. Sato, M. Kurniawan, A. Apostoluk, B. Masenelli, E. Maeda, Y. Ikuhara and J.-J. Delaunay, Nanotechnology 23, 495602 (10 pp), 2012. 2. ZnO nanoparticles as a luminescent down-shifting layer for photosensitive devices, Y. Zhu, A. Apostoluk, S. Liu, S. Daniele, B. Masenelli, Journal of Semiconductors 34 (5), 053005 (6 pp), 2013 ; DOI : 10.1088/16744926/34/5/053005. 3. Investigation of luminescent properties of ZnO nanoparticles for their use as a down-shifting layer on solar cells, A. Apostoluk, Y. Zhu, B. Canut, B. Masenelli, J.-J. Delaunay, K. Znajdek and M. Sibicski, Phys. Status Solidi C 10 (10), 1301–1307, 2013; DOI : 10.1002/pssc.201200950. 4. Effect of Pt decoration on the gas response of ZnO nano-particles, A. Ahmadi, A. Apostoluk, J.-J. Delaunay, Phys. Status Solidi C, 1– 4. 2013 ; DOI : 10.1002/pssc.201200937. 5. Nanowires on a Film for Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting M. Zhong, M. Kurniawan, A. Apostoluk, B. Vilquin and J.-J. Delaunay, in “Nanowires - Recent Advances”, INTECH, 2012, Xihong Peng (Ed.), ISBN 980953-307-525-4, DOI: 10.5772/52593. Available from : http://www.intechopen.com/books/nan… 76 Poster title Improvement of solar cell efficiency using a luminescent top layer of ZnO nanoparticles Poster abstract Working at the nanoscale presents some advantages and drawbacks as far as the optical properties of nanomaterials are concerned. It is well known that reducing the size often leads to the unintentional introduction of crystalline defects or impurities in nanoparticles and nanowires, near the surface, which in turn deteriorates their luminescence. In the present communication, we first show that according to the chemical synthesis conditions (hydrolysis or co-precipitation), we can control and enhance the visible luminescence of ZnO nanoparticles and even achieve high quantum yield. Our study emphasizes the role of specific elements (Li) or ligands (PAA coating in core-shell structure) on the control of the luminescence quantum efficiency. Then the ZnO NPs layer is deposited on the top of a solar cell. The ZnO NPs absorb efficiently the UV photons and emit light at longer wavelengths (which is called energy down-shifting), which subsequently is absorbed by the solar cell. A relative increase of the UV-wavelength response of a solar cell with a ZnO NPs layer on its top is demonstrated 77 First Name Satoshi Last Name Ashihara Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Laser Physics and Chemistry Address 2-24-16, Nakacho, Koganei, Tokyo, 184-8588, JAPAN Institution Tokyo Univ. of Agriculture and Technology Tel + 81 42 388 7536 Fax + 81 42 388 7536 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.tuat.ac.jp/ ashihara/ Participant category General Participant Session field Chemistry Session title Chemistry of "Origins of Life" Research field Optical Physics Statement of your research interests Ultrafast nonlinear optics (frequency conversion, temporal compression, shaping of short optical pulses), Nonlinear spectroscopy on condensed phase matter, Laser coherent control of matter Recent most important publications 1. S. Ashihara, “Controlling quantum interferences in IR vibrational excitations in metal carbonyls,” Ultrafast Phenomena XVIII (The European Physical Journal), Vol.41, 05024, (2013). 2. S. Ashihara, K. Shibuya, and S. Fujioka “Temperature dependence of vibrational relaxation of the OH bending mode in liquid water,” Chem. Phys. Lett. Vol. 502, pp.57-62 (2011). 3. S. Ashihara and Y. Kawahara, “Spectral broadening of mid-infrared femtosecond pulses in GaAs,” Opt. Lett., Vol. 34, No.24, 3839-3841 (2009) ; Selected for Virtual Journal of Ultrafast Science 9, Issue 2 (2010). 4. S. Ashihara, N. Huse, A. Espagne, E.T.J. Nibbering, T. Elsaesser, “Ultrafast librational dynamics and energy dissipation in the hydrogen bond network of water,” J. Phys. Chem. A. Vol.111, No. pp.743-746 (2007). 5. S. Ashihara, J. Nishina, T. Shimura, and K. Kuroda, “Soliton compression of femtosecond pulses in quadratic media,” J. Opt. Soc. Am B 19, pp.2505-2510 (2002). Virtual Journal of Ultrafast Science 1, Issue 5 (2002). Poster title Infrared Light-Field Engineering -To Watch and Handle the Microscopic World Poster abstract Infrared light is electromagnetic wave with longer wavelengths (or lower frequencies) than those of visible light. It was discovered in 1800 and nowadays used in industrial, scientific, and medical applications. One of the most important applications is the infrared spectroscopy that can be used to identify chemicals. We can see the molecular structure by exploiting the fact that molecules absorb specific frequencies that are characteristic of their structure. In the conventional infrared spectroscopy, thermal radiation has been used as a light source. In the last two decades, the technologies to generate coherent radiation at various wavelengths and to control the properties of light-field have been highly developed. Temporal and spatial localization of the light-field and synthesis of their waveform have become possible in infrared range as well. Such light-field engineering in the infrared opens up new possibilities to spectroscopy : watching 3D structure (or conformation) and dynamics of molecules, identifying chemicals with nanometer-scale spatial resolution, etc. Synthesized infrared light has the potential not only to watch but so to handle the events occurring at the microscopic world. The challenges to control the motion of electrons, atoms and molecules are carried out. 78 First Name Jean-Julien Last Name Aucouturier Position held Researcher Laboratory UMR 9912 Science et Technologies de la Musique et du Son (IRCAM) Address 1, place Stravinsky 75004 Paris, France Institution CNRS Tel + 33 6 47 07 20 57 E.mail [email protected] URL www.ircam.fr Participant category General Participant Session field Social Sciences/Humanities Session title Happiness Research Field Music cognition / music information retrieval Statement of your research interests I am fascinated by the power that music has on our body, heart and brains. My research combines experimental methods to study the emotional impact of music and sound (experimental psychology, brain imaging) and computational techniques to understand what part of the acoustic signal is able to trigger such reactions (music information retrieval, computational neuroscience). I’m the recipient of a 2013 ERC Starting Grant for my project CREAM ("cracking the emotional code of music"). Recent most important publications Aucouturier & Bigand (2013) Seven problems that keep Music Information Retrieval from attracting the interest of cognition and neuroscience, J. Int. Inf. Syst. Poster Title I sound happy, therefore I am Poster Abstract Using a commercial voice synthesizer, we have created a platform that can alter the emo- tional quality of participant’s speech in real-time (e.g. in the direction of sadness, fear, happiness, etc.). In our first study, participants were given the task of reading a story out loud while wearing a headset with a microphone. The voices of the participants were then transformed and fed back in the headphones with a specific emotional tone. Afterwards, the participants were asked to rate the emotionality of the story and their own experience during the reading. The results show that while participants often fail to notice the manipulation, it can significantly influence their emotional experience (assessed both with psychological tests and physiological measures), thus conclusively demonstrating a feedback effect of the quality of voice expression on our own emotions. 79 First Name Maya Last Name BACACHE-BEAUVALLET Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Telecom ParisTech Address 46 rue Barrault 75013 Paris Institution Telecom ParisTech Tel + 33 6 62 49 27 45 E.mail [email protected] Participant category Speaker Session field Social Sciences / Humanities Session title Happiness Research field Public economics Labor economics Culture Statement of your research interests I have two fields of interest : one is public employment (wages, compensation, careers, motivation) and the second is regulation. How regulation is modified in the digital context (IP, taxation, cultural environment). Recent most important publications Dynamic Entry and Investment in New Infrastructures: Empirical Evidence from the Telecoms Industry », avec M. Bourreau et G. Gaudin, Review of Industrial Organization 1. « Piracy and creation: the case of the music industry » avec M. Bourreau et F. Moreau, European Journal of Law and Economics, September 2012. 2. « Taxicab Licence Value and Market Regulation », avec L. Janin, Transport Policy 2011. 3. Les Stratégies absurdes, comment faire pire en croyant faire mieux, Seuil, 2009, Paris 4. « Impact des rémunérations variables dans les services publics », Actes de la Recherche en Sciences Sociales, sept 2011, n°189, 58-71. 80 First Name Christelle Last Name BAUNEZ Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory UMR 7289 Institut de Neurosciences de la Timone (INT) Address INT, Campus Santé Timone, 27 bld Jean Moulin 13385 Marseille cedex 05 Institution CNRS Tel + 33 4 91 32 40 62 Fax + 33 4 91 32 40 56 E.mail [email protected] Participant category PGM Session field Life / Medical Science Session title Psychiatric disorders: definitions and treatments Research field Statement of your research interests Involvement of the basal ganglia, and more specifically the subthalamic nucleus (STN), in non-motor processes, including attention, control of inhibition, motivation and their dysregulation towards pathology (obsessive compulsive disorders, addiction). Possible treatment of these pathologies using deep brain stimulation into the STN. The team I am leading works with a translational approach from rats to human (patients) and non-human primates. Recent most important publications 1. Eagle DM and Baunez C (2010) Is there an inhibitory-response control system in the rat? Evidence from anatomical and pharmacological studies Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews 34(1):50-72 2. Rouaud T*, Lardeux S*, Panayotis N, Paleressompoulle D, Cador M, Baunez C (2010) Reducing the desire for cocaine with subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation. P. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 107:1196-1200 3. Krack P, Hariz M, Baunez C, Guridi J, Obeso J (2010) Deep brain stimulation : from neurology to psychiatry. Trends Neurosci. 33(10):474-84 4. Pelloux Y and Baunez C (2013) Deep brain stimulation for addiction: why the subthalamic nucleus should be favored. Curr. Op. Neurobiol. 23: 713-720 5. Lardeux S., Paleressompoulle D., Pernaud R., Cador M., Baunez C. (2013) Different populations of subthalamic neurons encode cocaine and sucrose reward and predict error J. Neurophysiol. 110(7):1497-1510 81 Poster title Can inactivation of the subthalamic nucleus help treating alcoholism? Y. Pelloux and C. Baunez - Institut de Neurosciences de la Timone, UMR 7289 CNRS & Aix-Marseille Université, Marseille, France Poster abstract The subthalamic nucleus (STN) is the current target for the High Frequency Stimulation (HFS) treatment of Parkinson’s Disease or Obsessive Compulsive Disorders. Studying the impact of STN inactivation by either lesions or HFS in intact rats, we observed decreased motivation for cocaine with increased motivation for food reward (Baunez et al., 2005, Rouaud, Lardeux et al., 2010). STN lesions were also shown to increase motivation for alcohol in rats showing a high consumption in a forced consumption test, while decreasing the motivation for alcohol in the low drinker group (Lardeux and Baunez, 2008). The present study aimed to assess the effect of inactivating STN on diagnostic criteria for alcoholism i.e. 1) loss of control over alcohol intake, 2) alcohol use at the expense of other rewards and 3) despite adverse consequences (punishment) and 4) on the motivational modification observed after extended alcohol use. We developed a model evidencing after the loss of control over alcohol intake, a preference for the substance over non addictive reward (such as saccharine) in some vulnerable animals. Preliminary data show that STN lesion tends to prevent the loss of control over alcohol intake. Ongoing experiments are assessing the ability of STN lesion 1) to restore the control over alcohol intake of rats having previously lost it and 2) to reallocate alcohol related behaviors towards alternative natural rewards. After having controlled that STN lesion leaves the memory for aversive event unaffected, 3) further studies are also currently assessing its ability to reduce alcohol use in face of punishment. These results should validate the pertinence of targeting the STN against alcoholism. Baunez C, Dias C, Cador M, Amalric M. (2005) The subthalamic nucleus exerts opposite control on cocaine and 'natural' rewards. Nat Neurosci. 8(4):484-9. Lardeux S & Baunez C (2008) According to alcohol preference, the subthalamic nucleus exerts an opposite control on motivation for alcohol in rats. Neuropsychopharmacology: 33: 634-642 Rouaud T, Lardeux S, Panayotis N, Paleressompoulle D, Cador M, Baunez C. (2010) Reducing the desire for cocaine with subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.107:1196-200. 82 First Name Pierre Last Name Beck Position held Researcher Laboratory UMR 5274 Address 414, rue de la piscine 38041 Grenoble cedex 09 Institution UJF Tel + 33 6 16 94 32 57 E.mail [email protected] URL Participant category PGM Session field Earth Science / Environment Session title Earthquakes and Associated Risks Research field Planetary Sciences, Mars, Asteroids, Comets Statement of your research interests I am focused on the mineralogy of small solar system bodies, asteroids and comets. I study the radial transfer of volatiles across our stellar system from analysis of Space Mission data and extra-terrestrial samples. Recent most important publications 1. P. Beck, A. Garenne, E. Quirico,L. Bonal, G. Montes-Hernandez, F. Moynier, B. Schmitt. Transmission infrared spectra (2-25 microns) of carbonaceous chondrites: mineralogy, water and asteroidal processes. Icarus 229, 263-277. 2. P. Beck, A. Pommerol, N. Thomas, B. Schmitt and F. Moynier (2012). Photometry of meteorites. Icarus 218, 364-377 3. P. Beck, E. Quirico, G. Montes-Hernandez, L. Bonal, J. Bollard, F-R Orthous-Daunay , K. Howard , B. Schmitt , O. Brissaud, F. Deschamps, B. Wunder, and S. Guillot. Hydrous mineralogy of CM and CI chondrites from infrared spectroscopy and their relationship with low albedo asteroids (2010). Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 74, 4881-4892. 4. P. Beck, Goncharov, A.F., Struzhkin V., Militzer B., Mao, H-K., Hemley, R.J. Measurements of thermal diffusivity at high pressure using a transient heating method. Applied Physics Letters 91, 181914. 5. P. Beck, A. Pommerol, B. Schmitt and O. Brissaud Kinetics of water adsorption on minerals and the breathing of the Martian regolith. JGR planets 115, E10011. 83 Poster title Shock-induced synthesis and evolution of primitive organic coumpounds P. Beck1, H. Yabuta2, T. Atou3, E. Quirico1, Z. Yoldi-Martinez1, A. Guillot1, L. Bonal1, G. Montagnac4, B. Schmitt1 and G. Montes-Hernandez5. 1 UJF-Grenoble 1 / CNRS-INSU, Institut de Planetologie et d’Astrophysique de Grenoble (IPAG), France, email: [email protected]. 2 Department of Earth and Space Science, Osaka University, Japan. 3 Secure Material Center Materials and Structures Laboratory, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan. 4 Laboratoire de Sciences de la Terre. ENS Lyon, France. 5 Institut des Sciences de la Terre (IsTERRE), UJF-Grenoble 1, France. Poster abstract Chondritic organic matter might have evolved on its parent body where subjected to shock metamorphism [1-2]. If the effects of shock waves on minerals have been studied in details from the experimental and observational approaches [3-4] little is known on their effect on the carbonaceous component. Here, we experimentally exposed fragments of matrix of the Murchison chondrite to shock loading up to 40 GPa. We describe the effects on the mineralogy as well as on the organic component. Samples of Murchison meteorite (CM) were obtained through loan by the Museum of Natural History (Chicago). The sample was powdered and pressed to obtain 1 cm in diameter and 1 mm thick pellets. Pellets were then incorporated in a steel container and shocked to pressure of approximately 5-10-20 and 40 GPa, using a single-stage propellant gun (5-10-20 GPa) and a two-stage light gas gun (40 GPa) at the Tokyo Institute of Technology. Samples were then recovered and powdered. IR spectra were measured using the Hyperion microscope at IPAG, and Raman spectra were obtained using the Labram HR at ENS Lyon. IR spectra were obtained in the 2-15 micron region, and provide insights into the nature of the silicate phase present. As shock pressure increases the 3 μm band (-OH and H2O) appears to decrease in intensity with regard to the 10 μm band, indicative of a progressive dehydration of the phyllo-silicate phase. For the sample shocked at pressure of 5 to 20 GPa, minor effects are observed on the 10 μm band, which remains broad and structureless, which reveals the presence of a poorly crystalline phyllosilicate [5]. However in the case of the sample shocked at a pressure of 40 GPa, the 10 μm band clearly shows structure, which we interpret by the presence of well crystalline phyllosilicates. Raman spectra were directly measured on the powdered sample, and analyzed following [6]. When plotted in a FWHM vs Band G diagram, the samples shocked at 5, 10 and 20 GPa do not appear distinct from the initial samples. However in the case of the sample shocked at 40 GPa, a clear distinction is seen with regard to the other samples. A metamorphic trend is observed, which is distinguishable from long duration thermal metamorphism. The origin of this trend and its relation with those observed in chondritic samples will be discussed. References: [1] Quirico et al. (2009) Met. Soc. Meeting (2009) 2] Yabuta et al. (2010), Meteoritics & Planet. Sci,1446-1460 [3] Ahrens, TJ (1980) Science 207, 1035-1041 [4] Gillet, P. et al (2007) Mineralogy of Shocked Me-teorites. GSA Monograph. Ed. E. Ohtani [5] Beck et al., 2010, Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 74, 4881-4892. [6] Bonal et al., Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 70, 1849-1863. 84 First Name Michael Last Name BLUM Position held Researcher Laboratory UMR 5525 Techniques de l’Ingénierie Médicale et de la Complexité - Informatique, Mathématiques et Applications, Grenoble (TIMC-IMAG) Address TIMC-IMAG, Domaine de la Merci, 38706 La Tronche Cedex Institution CNRS Tel + 33 4 56 52 00 65 Fax + 33 4 56 52 00 55 E.mail [email protected] URL http://membres-timc.imag.fr/Michael Participant category Speaker Session field Mathematics / Informatics Session title Bayesian Statistics Research field Bayesian statistics, population genetics, approximate Bayesian Computation, bioinformatics Statement of your research interests My research concerns methodological developments in bioinformatics and computational statistics. I develop statistical methods and software to analyze population genomic data. I also collaborate with geneticists, biologists and medical doctors to participate to the analysis of the genetic data they generate. Recent most important publications 1. Blum MGB, MA Nunes, D Prangle, SA Sisson. A comparative review of dimension reduction methods in approximate Bayesian computation. Statistical Science, 28: 189-208 (2013 2. Sjödin P, AE Sjöstrand, M Jakobsson, MGB Blum. Resequencing data provide no evidence for a human bottleneck in Africa during the penultimate glacial period. Molecular Biology and Evolution 29:1851-1860 (2012) 3. Blum MGB Approximate Bayesian Computation: a nonparametric perspective. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 105: 1178-1187 4. Csilléry K, MGB Blum, OE Gaggiotti, O François. Approximate Bayesian Computation in practice. Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 25: 410-418 (2010) 5. Blum MGB, O François. Non-linear regression models for Approximate Bayesian Computation. Statistics and Computing, 20: 63-73 (2010). 85 First Name Jasmine Last Name Burguet Position held Researcher Laboratory Institut Jean-Pierre Bourgin (UMR 1318) Address INRA Centre de Versailles-Grignon Route de Saint-Cyr 78026 Versailles CEDEX FRANCE Institution INRA Tel + 33 1 30 83 30 27 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www-ijpb.versailles.inra.fr/ Participant category General Participant Session field Mathematics / Informatics Session title Bayesian Statistics Research field Spatial statistics; biology; 3D modeling; computer vision; image processing and analysis Statement of your research interests I work on the statistical analysis of the spatial organization of biological structures because functions and spatial architectures in biology are closely related. I mainly use images acquired using confocal or light microscopy. Then, I develop approaches for: the 3D reconstruction and modeling of structures, the spatial normalization and quantification of organizations, and the statistical comparison of experimental groups. Such developments contribute to revealing and to understanding the functioning of complex biological systems. Recent most important publications 1. Burguet, J, Mailly P, Andrey P (2013) Statistical groupwise comparison of spatial point patterns in biological imaging. IEEE ISBI 2013: From Nano to Macro : 456-459. 2. Burguet, J, Maurin, Y, Andrey, P (2011) A method for modeling and visualizing the three-dimensional organization of neuron populations from replicated data: Properties, implementation and illustration. Pattern Recogn Lett 32: 1894-1901. 3. Burguet J, Mailly P, Maurin Y, Andrey P (2011). Reconstructing the three-dimensional surface of a branching and merging biological structure from a stack of coplanar contours. IEEE ISBI 2011: From Nano to Macro: 602605. 4. Schwarz, J, Burguet, J, Rampin, O et al. (2010) Three-Dimensional Macronutrient-Associated Fos Expression Patterns in the Mouse Brainstem. PLOS ONE 5. 86 Poster title Analysis and comparison of the spatial organization of biological structures: the particular case of punctual data Poster abstract In biology, functions are closely related to specific spatial architectures. Many molecular, histological and imaging techniques allow to reveal how biological structures are organized in 3D. However, the lack of quantitative methods devoted to the analysis of the images produced is a recurrent problem reported in the scientific community. In particular, the developpement of statistical procedures that allow to reveal significant differences between 3D biological organizations remains an important ongoing challenge. To illustrate the overall approach that we developped for the analysis and the comparison of biological structures, we focus here on data assimilated to sets of points (e.g., positions of endosomes in cells or of neurons in neuronal populations). Inferring the way in which points are distributed in 3D is not a simple issue, especially when it comes at integrating repeated experiments. The approach we present here includes the spatial normalization of data, the building of a statistical model of a point distribution, and the comparison of groups of point patterns. Our methodology being generic, it can be used to analyze various biological systems and at different scales. 87 First Name Alain Last Name CELZARD Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory UMR 7198 Institut Jean Lamour (IJL) Address Ecole des mines de Nancy, Parc de Saurupt - CS 14234, 54042 Nancy cedex Institution Université de Lorraine Tel + 33 3 29 29 61 14 Fax + 33 3 29 29 61 38 E.mail [email protected] URL uhp-nancy.fr/fr/recherche/les-thematiques/ Participant category General Participant Session field Earth Science Environment Session title Earthquakes and Associated Risks Research field Carbon materials; Porous materials; Physical properties; Modelling; Applications Statement of your research interests I develop an integrated approach : synthesis - characterisation - property measurements - modelling - applications – optimisation, for investigating carbonaceous materials for energy and environmental purposes : energy storage, pollutant removal, thermal management, fire resistance, porous electrodes, catalyst supports. Most of these materials are derived from and allow the valorisation of vegetable resources. I also perform theoretical studies dealing with disordered and / or porous carbonaceous systems and with their optimisation for industrial applications. Recent most important publications 1. G. Amaral-Labat, L.I. Grishechko, A. Szczurek, V. Fierro, B.N. Kuznetsov, A. Pizzi, A. Celzard. Highly mesoporous organic aerogels derived from soy and tannin. Green Chemistry 14 (2012) 3099-3106 2. F. Braghiroli, V. Fierro, M.T. Izquierdo, J. Parmentier, A. Pizzi, A. Celzard. Nitrogen-doped carbon materials produced from hydrothermally treated tannin. Carbon 50 (2012) 5411-5420 3. A. Celzard, G. Tondi, D. Lacroix, G. Jeandel, B. Monod, V. Fierro, A. Pizzi. Radiative properties of tannin-based, glasslike, carbon foams. Carbon 50 (2012) 4102-4113 4. G. Amaral-Labat, E. Gourdon, V. Fierro, A. Pizzi, A. Celzard. Acoustic properties of cellular vitreous carbon foams. Carbon 58 (2013) 76-86. 5. A. Szczurek, V. Fierro, A. Pizzi, A. Celzard. Mayonnaise, whipped cream and meringue, a new carbon cuisine. Carbon 58 (2013) 245-248 Poster title Versatility of tannins as precursors of new carbon materials Poster abstract Condensed tannins are abundant, non toxic and renewable raw materials. Mainly extracted from tree barks, these polyphenolic molecules have commercial applications in leatherwork but their interest is growing in the chemical and food industries. Their chemical structure and their reactivity make them easily polymerised, leading to high-quality thermoset resins. Whether these resins are foamed, gelled, or polymerized after emulsification, spray-drying, hydrothermal treatment, or self-assembly of amphiphilic surfactants, a number of different architectures can be built. The phenolic and highly aromatic nature of the crosslinked resins allows obtaining an excellent glasslike carbon after pyrolysis. In this poster, many different materials will be presented as well as their performances in the main applications in which they have been successfully tested: vitreous carbon foams, aerogels, micro or hollow spheres, polyHIPEs, ordered mesoporous carbons, etc., for electromagnetic absorption, electrochemical storage, microbial fuel cells, conductive inks, thermal insulation, and so forth. 88 First Name Johann Last Name Coraux Position heldResearcher Laboratory UPR 2940 Institut Néel Address Institut Néel, CNRS & Université Joseph Fourier BP166, 38042 Grenoble Cedex 9, France Institution CNRS Tel + 33 4 76 88 12 89 E.mail [email protected] Participant category Speaker Session field Materials Science Session title Graphene, the "miracle material" Research field Surface Science, 2D Materials, Graphene, Nanoscience Statement of your research interests My research is focused on condensed matter surface science studies of the elementary processes during growth of semiconductors, metals, and two-dimensional materials, especially graphene, as well as of the structural, electronic, and magnetic properties in these systems, down to atomic scale, noticeably those properties stemming from interfaces. Recent most important publications 1. Z. Han, A. Kimouche, A. Allain, H. Arjmandi-Tash, A. Reserbat-Plantey, S. Pairis, V. Reita, N. Bendiab, J. Coraux, V. Bouchiat. Homogeneous electronic and optical properties of graphene due to the suppression of mutlilayer patches during CVD on copper foils. Adv. Func. Mater., available online (http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ adfm.201301732) 2. N. Blanc, F. Jean, A. Krasheninnikov, G. Renaud, J. Coraux. Point defect-induced strains in epitaxial graphene. Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 085501 (2013) 3. J. Coraux, L. Marty, N. Bendiab, V. Bouchiat. Functional hybrids based on large-area high quality graphene. Acc. Chem. Res., available online (http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ar3001519) 4. C. Busse, P. Lazi, R. Djemour, J. Coraux, T. Gerber, N. Atodiresei, V. Caciuc, R. Brako, A. T. N’Diaye, S. Blügel, J. Zegenhagen, T. Michely. Graphene on Ir(111) : physisorption with chemical modulation. Phys. Rev. Lett., 107, 037101 (2011) 5. J. Coraux, A. T. N’Diaye, C. Busse, T. Michely. Structural coherency of graphene on Ir(111). Nano Lett. 8, 565 (2008) 89 First Name Grégoire Last Name Danger Position held Researcher Laboratory UMR 7345 Physique des Interactions Ioniques et Moleculaires (PIIM) Address UMR CNRS 7345 - Centre Saint-Jérôme - case 252 Université d’Aix-Marseille, 13397 Marseille, France Institution Aix-Marseille University Tel + 33 4 91 28 82 85 E.mail [email protected] Participant category Speaker Session field Chemistry Session title Chemistry of "Origins of Life" Research field Astrochemistry; Prebiotic chemistry; Analytical Chemistry; Organic chemistry Statement of your research interests Astrochemistry: Research on chemical pathways for the formation of molecules in astrophysical environments using analogs of interstellar or cometary ices. Understanding the composition and the evolution of organic matter in meteorites and comets from analogs. Study of volatile organic compounds coming from the warming of interstellar/cometary ice analogs. Prebiotic Chemistry: Development of a chemical system allowing the formation of oligopeptides in prebiotic conditions. Determine in which condition a chemical system allowing oligopeptide formation could lead to the emergence of specific physico-chemical properties such as auto-catalysis. Recent most important publications 1. Characterization of interstellar/cometary organic residue analogs using very high resolution mass spectrometry, G. Danger, F-R. Orthous-Daunay, P. de Marcellus, P. Modica, V. Vuitton, F. Duvernay, L. Le Sergeant d’Hendecourt, R. Thissen, and T. Chiavassa, Geochimica & Cosmochimica Acta, 2013, 118, 184-201. DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2013.05.015 2. 5(4H)-Oxazolones as Intermediates in the Carbodiimide- and Cyanamide- Promoted Peptide Activations in Aqueous Solution, G. Danger, A. Michaut, M. Bucchi, L. Boiteau, J. Canal, R. Plasson, and R. Pascal, Angewandte Chemie International Edition, 2013, 52, 611-614, DOI : 10.1002/anie.201207730 and 10.1002/ ange.201207730 3. Hydroxyacetonitrile (HOCH2CN) formation in astrophysical conditions. Competition with the aminomethanol, a glycine precursor, G. Danger, F. Duvernay, P. Theulé, F. Borget, and T. Chiavassa, The Astrophysical Journal, 2012, 756,11. DOI:10.1088/0004-637X/756/1/11 4. Pathways for the formation and evolution of peptides in prebiotic environments, G. Danger, R. Plasson, and R. Pascal, Chemical Society Reviews, 2012, 41, 5416-5429, DOI : 10.1039/C2CS35064E 5. Experimental investigation of aminoacetonitrile formation through the Strecker synthesis in astrophysical like conditions : reactivity of methanimine (CH2NH), ammonia (NH3), and hydrogen cyanide (HCN), G. Danger, F. Borget, M. Chomat, F. Duvernay, P. Theulé, J-C Guillemin, L. Le Sergeant d’Hendecourt, T. Chiavassa. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 2011, 525, A30. DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201117602. 90 First Name Véronique Last Name Deroche-Gamonet Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory CRI U 862 Physiopathologie de la plasticité neuronale Address NeuroCentre Magendie 146 rue Léo Saignat 33076 Bordeaux France Institution Inserm Tel + 33 5 57 57 36 80 Fax + 33 5 57 57 36 69 E.mail [email protected] Participant category Chair Session field Life / Medical Science Session title Psychiatric disorders: definitions and treatments Research Field Drug addiction Animal models Experimental psychopathology Psychobiology Neurobiology Statement of your research interests I have been conducting experimental research on drug addiction since the early 90s. I always challenged the classical experimental preparations used to model drug addiction. This led to the development of the first DSM-based animal model of addiction, acknowledged as a key innovation. A new challenge is the coordination of the OptoPath project for an innovative platform in experimental psychopathology based on cutting edge exploratory techniques and a dimensional transnosographic approach of key psychopathologies, i.e. addiction, obesity, PTSD, and aging-related memory deficits. Recent most important publications 1. Kasanetz F*, Deroche-Gamonet V*, Berson N, Balado E, Lafourcade M, Manzoni O, Piazza PV. Transition to addiction is associated with a persistent impairment in synaptic plasticity. Science, 2010, 328(5986):1709-12. *equal contribution. 2. Kasanetz F*, Lafourcade M*, Deroche-Gamonet V*, Revest JM, Berson N, Balado E, Fiancette JF, Renault P, Piazza PV, Manzoni OJ. Prefrontal synaptic markers of cocaine addiction-like behavior in rats. Mol Psychiatry, 2013, 18(6):729-737. *equal contribution. 3. Belin D, Balado E, Piazza PV, Deroche-Gamonet V. Pattern of Intake and Drug Craving Predict the Development of Cocaine Addiction-like Behavior in Rats. Biol Psychiatry, 2009, 65(10) : 863-8. 4. Belin D, Berson N, Balado E, Piazza PV, Deroche-Gamonet V. High-novelty-preference rats are predisposed to compulsive cocaine self-administration. Neuropsychopharmacology, 2011, 36(3):569-79. 5. Deroche-Gamonet V, Belin D, Piazza PV. Evidence for addiction-like behavior in the rat. Science. 2004, 305(5686):1014-7. 91 First Name Erik Last Name DUJARDIN Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory UPR 8011 Centre d’Elaboration des Matériaux et d’Etudes Structurales (CEMES) Address B.P. 94347 29 rue Jeanne Marvig 31055 Toulouse Cedex 4 Institution CNRS Tel + 33 5 62 25 78 38 Fax + 33 5 62 25 79 00 E.mail [email protected] Participant category Chair Session field Materials Science Session title Graphene, the “miracle material” Research Field Material science, nanosciences, graphene, electronics, carbon Statement of your research interests In 2003, Erik Dujardin joined CEMES, Toulouse (F) as a tenured CNRS staff, where he has been interested in developing new approaches to the information processing to and from a single molecular-sized system using electronic transport in nanopatterned graphene and plasmonic waveguiding in metal colloids and colloidal self-assembly. E. Dujardin is keen on cross-fertilizing his activity at the interface between physics, chemistry and biology. Recent most important publications A full publication list can be found at : http://www.researcherid.com/rid/A-2… 1. Reversible optical doping in graphene. A. Tiberj, M. Rubio-Roy, M. Paillet,, J. R. Huntzinger, P. Landois, M. Mirkolasek, S. Contreras, J.L. Sauvajol, E. Dujardin, and A.A. Zahab. Scientific Reports, 2013, 3, 2355 2. Graphene, a 2D dream coming true. C. Soldano, A. Mahmood, E. Dujardin. Carbon, 2010, 48, 2127-2150. 3. Side-gated transport in Focused Ion Beam-fabricated multilayered graphene nanoribbons. J.-F. Dayen, A. Mahmood, D. S. Golubev, I. Roch-Jeune, P. Salles and E. Dujardin. Small, 2008, 4, 716-720 4. Fabrication of mesoscopic devices from graphite microdiscs. E. Dujardin, T. Thio, H. Lezec, T. W. Ebbesen. Appl. Phys. Lett., 2001, 79, 2474-2476. 5. Graphitic cones and the nucleation of curved carbon surfaces. A. Krishnan, E. Dujardin, M.M.J. Treacy, J. Hugdahl, S. Lynum and T. W. Ebbesen. Nature, 1997, 388, 451-454. 92 First Name Fabrice Last Name Duvernay Position held Researcher Laboratory UMR 7345 Laboratoire des Interactions Ioniques et Moléculaires (PIIM) Address Centre Saint-Jérôme - case 252 Aix-Marseille Université, 13397 Marseille, France Institution Aix-Marseille Université Tel + 33 4 91 28 85 82 Fax + 33 4 91 28 91 94 E.mail [email protected] URL http://sites.univ-provence.fr/piim/ Participant category General Participant Session field Chemistry Session title Chemistry of "Origins of Life" Research field Astrochemistry spectroscopy low temperature reactivity kinetic Statement of your research interests A major theme of our group is the study of the chemical evolution of primitive interstellar ices induced by energetic processes such as irradiation by UV photons bombardment by hydrogen or by thermal effects. The objective is to determine the possible mechanisms leading to the formation of complex organic molecules from interstellar ice analogues. We have shown that through simulation experiments in the laboratory based mainly on spectroscopic techniques (infrared, mass spectrometry) it was possible to obtain information on the evolution of matter in protostellar and cometary environments. We were able to demonstrate a direct link between primitive molecules (H2O , CH3OH , NH3 … ) contained in the coat of ice covering interstellar grains and molecules observed in the refractory organic residues (HMT, Polymers) obtained after irradiation and heating of these ices. These residues can be treated as cometary grain analogues. These results will undoubtedly assist in the interpretation of data from space missions such as Rosetta mission. Recent most important publications 1. V. Vinogradoff, N. Fray, F. Duvernay, G. Briani, G. Danger, H. Cottin, P. Theulé, T. Chiavassa. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 2013, 551, A128. 2. Vinogradoff V., Rimola A., Duvernay F., Danger G., Theulé P., & Chiavassa T., Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 14,12309-12320 (2012) 3. Vinogradoff V., Duvernay F., Danger G., Theulé P., & Chivassa T., A&A 530, A128 (2011) 4. Duvernay F., Dufauret V., Danger G., Theule P., Borget F., Chiavassa T., A&A 523, A79 (2010) Poster title Chemistry in interstellar ice analogues Poster abstract Whereas complex organic molecules are observed in a large variety of astrophysical ob- jects, little is known about their formation mechanism. Laboratory simulations on interstellar ice analogues are thus crucial to understand the origin of those complex organic molecules. In this context, we determine the formation mechanism of one major product detected in the organic residue formed in laboratory: the Hexamethylenetetramine (HMT). We compare the warming of the photolysed interstellar ice analogue with the warming of two non-photolysed specific ice mixtures H2CO:NH3:HCOOH and CH2NH:HCOOH, used as references. Using both global and specific approaches, we show the precise role of the UV photons and the thermal processing in the HMT formation. 93 First Name Claire Last Name Etchegaray Position held Researcher Laboratory EA 373 Institut de Recherches Philosophiques (IREPH) Address IREPH 200 avenue de la République 92000 Nanterre France Institution University of Paris 10 Tel +33 6 75 13 32 70 E.mail [email protected] Participant category Chair Session field Social Sciences / Humanities Session title Happiness Research Field Moral philosophy Pleasure Happiness Utilitarism Consequentialism Statement of your research interests My primary interests are in philosophy of belief and scepticism. I am currently working on Eighteenth Century Philosophy, especially British Enlightenment, as it was a major scene of the debate on scepticism at that time. In this respect, I focus on metaphysical issues, epistemological theses and medical views, along with moral positions. Beside, I am interested in various ways of so-called “answers to scepticism” in contemporary philosophy, regarding either belief in general or peculiar evidence (e.g. testimonial evidence, perceptual evidence). I am also working on contemporary theories of action. Recent most important publications « Can We Know Whether Scepticism Is Right or Wrong? Reid’s Criticisms and Hume’s Answer », Scepticism in the Eighteenth Century : Enlightenment, Lumières, Aufklärung, éd. Sébastien Charles et Plinio Junqueira Smith, Springer, 2013 « Whytt and the Idea of Power. Physiological Evidence as a Challenge to the 18th Century Criticism of the Notion of Power », in CL. Crignon, C. Zelle et N. Alloca (eds) Medical empiricism and philosophy of human nature in the 17th and 18th centuries, Early Science and Medicine, 18, 4-5, pp. 381-404. "Assentiment et éthique de la croyance chez Thomas Reid", in L. Jaffro (ed), Croit-on comme on veut ? La controverse classique sur le rôle de la volonté dans l’assentiment, Paris, Vrin, forthcoming (2013) 94 First Name Alain Last Name FAVE Position held Researcher Laboratory Institut des Nanotechnologies de Lyon (INL) Address INSA de Lyon , Bât Blaise Pascal 7, avenue Jean Capelle 69621 Villeurbanne Cedex Institution INSA de Lyon Tel +33 4 72 43 84 64 E.mail [email protected] URL inl.cnrs.fr Participant category PGM Session field Materials Science Session title Graphene, the "miracle material" Research Field Solar cells, thin film crystalline Silicon epitaxy, new concepts Statement of your research interests My research focus on high efficient solar cells based on crystalline Si thin film material. We develop processes, from material elaboration to devices fabrication, in order to meet both requirements of low cost and high efficiencies. I also work on III-V/Si tandem solar cells using InGaN or GaAlAs. Recent most important publications 1. Combined front and back diffraction gratings for broad band light trapping in thin film solar cell X. Meng, E. Drouard, G. Gomard, R. Peretti, A. Fave and C. Seassal Opt Express. 2012 Sep 10 ;20 Suppl 5:A560-71. doi : 10.1364/OE.20.00A560. 2. Design, fabrication and optical characterization of photonic crystal assisted thin film monocrystalline-silicon solar cells. X. Meng, V. Depauw, G. Gomard, O. El Daif, C. Trompoukis, E. Drouard, C. Jamois, A. Fave, F. Dross, I. Gordon, C. Seassal Opt. Express 20, 14, A465-A475 (2012) 3. Light harvesting by planar photonic crystals in solar cells : the case of amorphous silicon G. Gomard, X. Meng, E. Drouard, K. El Hajjam, E. Gerelli, R. Peretti, A. Fave, R. Orobtchouk, M. Lemiti, C. Seassal Recent Research Developments in Applied Physics 14, 04011 (2012) 4. Facile metallization of dielectric coatings for plasmonic solar cells S. Bastide, T. Nychyporuk, Z. Zhou, A. Fave, M. Lemiti Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells 102, 26-30 (2012) 5. Nanophotonics for Light Management in Thin Film Si Solar Cells A. Fave, X. Meng, G. Gomard, E. Drouard, C. Seassal 10th Japan-France Workshop on Nanomaterials, 1st WPI Workshop on Materials Science, Kyoto, Japan 6-9 June 2013 95 First Name Nobuaki Last Name FUJI Position held Researcher Laboratory UMR 7154 Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris (IPGP) Address 1, rue Jussieu 75238 Paris Cedex 05 Institution University Tel + 33 6 67 29 61 09 E.mail [email protected] Participant category General Participant Session field Earth Science / Environment Session title Eathquakes and Associated Risks Research field Seismology, exploration geophysics, marines geophysics, plate tectonics, wave propagation Statement of your research interests My main research interest is to extract as much information as possible from the Earth’s responses, especially from seismograms generated by either natural earthquakes or active sources to infer detailed structure of our planet from global scale to several kilometers’ subsurface scale. To pursue this, I have developed theoretical/ numerical tools for inverting waveforms themselves and have applied them to real data. Recent most important publications 1. Fuji, N., Chevrot, S., Zhao, L., Geller, R.J., Kawai, K. (2012) Finite-frequency structural sensitivities of shortperiod compressional body waves, Geophys. J. Int., 190, 522—540. 2. Fuji, N., Kawai, K., Geller, R.J. (2010) A methodology for inversion of broadband seismic waveforms for elastic and anelastic structure and its application to the mantle transition zone beneath the Northwestern Pacific. Phys. Earth Planet. Inter., 180, 3-4, 118—137. 3. Monteiller, V., Chevrot, S., Komatitsch, D., Fuji, N. (2013) A hybrid technique for 3D modelling of high frequency teleseismic body waves in the Earth, Geophys. J. Int., 192, 230-247. 4. Konishi, K., Kawai, K., Geller, R.J., Fuji, N. (2012) Waveform inversion of broad-band body-wave data for the 5. Kawai, K., Sekine, S., Fuji, N., Geller, R.J. (2009) Waveform inversion for D" structure beneath northern Asia using Hi-net tiltmeter data. Geophys Res. Lett., 36, L039651, doi:10.1029/2009GL039651. Poster title Towards high-frequency waveform inversion for Earth’s structure Poster abstract Waveform inversion aims to estimate high-resolution Earth models by minimising the dif- ference between observed and modelled seismic waveforms. From global (e.g., Takeuchi 2012) or regional (e.g., Fichtner et al. 2010; Konishi et al. 2012) to local scales (e.g., Ratcliffe et al. 2011), waveform inversion studies have become a topic of great interest in exploration of our planet. In order to obtain high resolution, it is required to analyse as high frequency data as possible, by using as accurate an inversion method as possible. In this presentation, we will summarise some of our important numerical tools to concur the computational burden to conduct high-frequency waveform inversion in the near future. 96 First Name Jun Last Name Fujii Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Komazawa university Address 1-23-1 Komazawa Setagaya-ku, Tokyo 154-0012, Japan Institution University Tel + 81 3 34 18 93 22 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.komazawa-u.ac.jp/ junfujii/ Participant category General Participant Session field Social Sciences / Humanities Session title Happiness Research field Buddhism Statement of your research interests What is suffering? How can Buddhism cure human’s suffering? Why has Buddha’s teaching spread over Asian countries? Recent most important publications Studies on the developments of Kukai’s thought (Kukai no shisoteki tenkai no kenkyu), Transview, Tokyo, 2008, in Japanese ’Treatise on the Ineeaulity of the Three Teachings (Buddhism, Confusianism and Taoism) composed bu Yao Bian: A print edition of a hand-copied manuscript from the Ishiyamadera collection’ (Yoben sen Sankyofuseiron syahon no honkoku), Bulletin of the Research Institute of Esoteric Buddhist Culture (Mikkyo Bunka Kenkyusho Kiyo) 24, Koyasan, 2011, in Japanese Poster title Application of Buddhist theory to support for children of evacuees by Fukushima nuclear accident Poster abstract Fukushima nuclear accident caused by the earthquake of 2011 has produced more than 100,000 refugees who avoided their own residence. While 1mSv was the standard for residence before the accident, this standard has been raised to 20mSv without a sufficient explanation to residents after the accident. As a result, parents who worry about the effects of radiation on children have evacuated to the area that seems safer from the point of radiation. However, in the political and social situation in Japan, which is strongly influenced by local officials who are narrow-minded and lazy, I suspect that there is a strong and silent pressure which recommends a return to their own residence for evacuees now. Regardless of the actual impact of radiation, it is true that strong mental stress on evacuees exists and that the local government has not carried out sufficient measures. Since parents have strong interest in education, so based on Buddhist theory, which is called ‘ no-self ‘ or ‘ change of mind ’, I am providing a "place to accept children of evacuees mentally", and further arbitrating conflict between ordinary Japanese volunteers who have no religious background. 97 First Name Hiroyuki Last Name Goto Position held Researcher Laboratory Disaster Prevention Research Institute (DPRI) Address Gokasho Uji, Kyoto, Japan Institution Kyoto University Tel + 81 774 38 4067 Fax + 81 774 38 4070 E.mail [email protected] URL http://wwwcatfish.dpri.kyoto-u.ac.j… Participant category Speaker Session field Earth Science / Environment Session title Earthquakes and Associated Risks Research Field Earthquake Engineering, Seismology, Applied Mechanics, Geotechnical Engineering Statement of your research interests Modeling of underground structure and numerical simulation of strong ground motion ; Rupture dynamics on earthquake fault ; Accurate and efficient numerical simulation methods on fracture mechanics ; Elastic wave theory and its mathematical treatment ; Field surveys and observations for revealing disaster mechanism on actual earthquake events. Recent most important publications 1. Hiroyuki Goto, Yoshiya Hata, Yasuko Kuwata, Hidekazu Yamamoto, Hitoshi Morikawa and Shunichi Kataoka: Earthquake source and ground motion characteristics in eastern Japan during the 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku earthquake, Journal of JSCE, 1(1), 329-342, 2013. 2. Hiroyuki Goto, Yuichi Kawamura, Sumio Sawada and Takashi Akazawa: Direct estimation of near-surface damping based on normalized energy density, Geophys. J. Int., 194(1), 488-498, 2013. 3. Hiroyuki Goto, Yojiro Yamamoto and Saeko Kita: Dynamic rupture simulation of the 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku earthquake: multi-event generation within dozens of seconds, Earth, Planets and Space, 64(12), 1167-1175, 2012. 4. Hiroyuki Goto, Hitoshi Morikawa, Masayuki Inatani, Yumiko Ogura, Satoshi Tokue, Xin-Rui Zhang, Masahiro Iwasaki, Masayuki Araki, Sumio Sawada and Aspasia Zerva: Very dense seismic array observations in Furukawa district, Japan, Seismological Research Letters, 83(5), 765-774, 2012. 5. Kazunori Wada and Hiroyuki Goto: Generation mechanism of surface and buried faults: Effect of plasticity in a shallow crust structure, Bull. Seism. Soc. Am., 102(4), 1712-1728, 2012. 98 First Name Masataka Last Name Goto Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) Address IT, AIST, 1-1-1 Umezono, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8568, Japan Institution AIST Tel+ 81 29 861 5898 Fax + 81 29 861 3313 E.mail [email protected] URL http://staff.aist.go.jp/m.goto Participant category General Participant Session field Mathematics / Informatics Session title Bayesian Statistics Research field Music informatics, Music Information Research, Music Technologies, Singing Information Processing, Media Interaction Statement of your research interests In 1992 Masataka Goto was one of the first to start work on automatic music understanding, and has since been at the forefront of research in music technologies (including singing technologies) and music interfaces based on those technologies. Since 1998 he has also worked on speech recognition interfaces, and since 2006 he has overseen the development of web services based on content analysis and crowdsourcing, such as Songle (http://songle.jp), Songrium (http://songrium.jp), and PodCastle (http://en.podcastle.jp). Recent most important publications 1. Masataka Goto, Tomoyasu Nakano, Shuuji Kajita, Yosuke Matsusaka, Shin’ichiro Nakaoka, and Kazuhito Yokoi : VocaListener and VocaWatcher : Imitating a Human Singer by Using Signal Processing, 2012 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing (ICASSP 2012), pp.5393-5396, March 2012. 2. Kazuyoshi Yoshii and Masataka Goto : A Nonparametric Bayesian Multipitch Analyzer Based on Infinite Latent Harmonic Allocation, IEEE Transactions on Audio, Speech, and Language Processing, Vol.20, No.3, pp.717730, March 2012. 3. Matthias Mauch, Hiromasa Fujihara, and Masataka Goto : Integrating Additional Chord Information into HMM-Based Lyrics-to-Audio Alignment, IEEE Transactions on Audio, Speech, and Language Processing, Vol.20, No.1, pp.200-210, January 2012. 4. Hiromasa Fujihara, Masataka Goto, Jun Ogata, and Hiroshi G. Okuno : LyricSynchronizer : Automatic Synchronization System Between Musical Audio Signals and Lyrics, IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Signal Processing, Vol.5, No.6, pp.1252-1261, October 2011. 5. Masataka Goto and Takayuki Goto : Musicream : Integrated Music-Listening Interface for Active, Flexible, and Unexpected Encounters with Musical Pieces, IPSJ Journal, Vol.50, No.12, pp.2923-2936, December 2009 99 Poster title Music Information Research: Active Music Listening Interfaces and Singing Synthesis Systems Poster abstract I introduce the frontiers of music technologies by showing some examples of our research on active music listening interfaces and singing synthesis systems. Active music listening interfaces demonstrate how end users can benefit from music understanding technologies. Active music listening aims at allowing the user to understand better the music he or she listens to and to actively influence the listening experience. For example, a web service for active music listening, "Songle" (http://songle.jp), facilitates deeper understanding of music by visualizing its music scene descriptions estimated automatically, such as music structure, hierarchical beat structure, melody line, and chords. The user can actively browse a song by jumping to a chorus or repeated section during playback. Singing synthesis systems, "VocaListener" and "VocaWatcher", imitate singing expressions of the voice and face of a human singer. VocaListener can synthesize natural singing voices by analyzing and imitating the pitch and dynamics of the human singing. VocaWatcher can generate realistic facial motions of a humanoid robot by analyzing and imitating facial motions of a human singing that are recorded by a single video camera. These systems that focus on "imitation" are not only promising for representing human-like naturalness, but also useful for providing intuitive control means. 100 First Name Christine Last Name Guerlin Position held Researcher Laboratory UMR 8559 Laboratoire Kastler Brossel Address Département de Physique de l’ENS 24 rue Lhomond 75005 Paris France Institution Université Pierre et Marie Curie Tel + 33 1 40 51 23 61 Fax + 33 1 43 25 55 42 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.lkb.ens.fr Participant category Speaker Session field Physics and Astrophysics Session title Supersolidity and quantum plasticity Research field Atomic physics - Quantum optics - Cold quantum gases Statement of your research interests My general research interests are in the field of fundamental physics, more particularly quantum physics and its interface with other fields. I am interested in studying and using quantum coherence of atomic ensembles, by interaction with light. I work today on atomic clocks, and on studying general relativity by sending cold atom interferometers in space. Recent most important publications 1. Cavity Quantum Electrodynamics with a Rydberg blocked atomic ensemble C. Guerlin, E. Brion, T. Esslinger and K. Moelmer, Phys. Rev. A 82, 053832 (2010) 2. Dicke quantum phase transition with a superfluid gas in an optical cavity K. Baumann, C. Guerlin, F. Brennecke and T. Esslinger Nature 464, 1301 (2010) 3. Progressive field-state collapse and quantum non-demolition photon counting C. Guerlin, J. Bernu, S. Deléglise, C. Sayrin, S. Gleyzes, S. Kuhr, M. Brune, J.M. Raimond and S. Haroche Nature 448, 889-894 (2007) 4. Quantum jumps of light recording the birth and death of a photon in a cavity S. Gleyzes, S. Kuhr, C. Guerlin, J. Bernu, S. Deléglise, U.B. Hoff, M. Brune, J.M. Raimond and S. Haroche Nature 446, 297-300 (2007) 101 First Name Patrick Last Name Hennebelle Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory UMR 7158 Address Orme les merisiers CEA/Saclay 91191 Gif sur Yvette Institution CEA Tel + 33 1 69 08 99 87 E.mail [email protected] Participant category General Participant Session field Physics and Astrophysics Session title Supersolidity and quantum plasticity Research Field Star formation, numerical simulation, fluid dynamics Statement of your research interests I study star formation, which a key process in our universe and interstellar gas dynamics. For this purpose, I perform heavy numerical magneto-hydrodynamical simulations and analytical calculations. Recent most important publications 1. Audit, E. ; Hennebelle, P., 2005A&A, 433 - 1 Thermal condensation in a turbulent atomic hydrogen flow 2. Hennebelle, Patrick ; Chabrier, Gilles, 2008ApJ, 684, 395 Analytical Theory for the Initial Mass Function : CO Clumps and Prestellar Cores 3. Hennebelle, P. ; Fromang, S., 2008A&A, 477 - 9 Magnetic processes in a collapsing dense core. I. Accretion and ejection 4. Joos, M. ; Hennebelle, P. ; Ciardi, A., 2012A&A, 543A.128 Protostellar disk formation and transport of angular momentum during magnetized core collapse 5. Hennebelle, Patrick ; Falgarone, Edith, 2012A&ARv..20, 55 Turbulent molecular clouds Poster title Star formation and the interstellar cycle Poster abstract Stars are the building blocks of our universe. On large scales, they determine the evolution of galaxies while on small scales, they host planets like ours. Stars are also fundamental since they synthetize the heavy elements, such as carbon and oxygen, which are essential for molecular complexity and eventually life. While it is now well established that stars form through gravitational collapse within molecular clouds, the details of this process remain largely unknown. In particular, at which rate they form?, what is their mass distribution?, how do they feedback on the surrounding medium? are fundamental but partially understood questions. Another fundamental issue is how the protoplanetary disk, that form around the protostars and which will eventually give raise to a solar system do form and evolve. This field of research constitutes a good example of how collaborations between scientists of complementary skills are necessary to make progress. Indeed, theory, numerical simulations and observations are all crucial and must be developed in parallel. 102 First Name Toru Last Name Hirahara Position held Researcher Laboratory Surface Transport Laboratory, Hasegawa Group Address 7-3-1, Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0033 Institution University of Tokyo Tel + 81 3 5841 4209 Fax + 81 3 5841 4209 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www-surface.phys.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp Participant category General Participant Session field Materials Science Session title Graphene the “miracle material” Research field Experimental condensed-matter physics, surface, nanotechnology, scanning tunneling microscopy, angle-resoved photoemission spectroscopy Statement of your research interests Statement of your research interests I study the low-dimensional systems at solid surfaces, particularly focusing on the peculiar physical properties of their electronic/atomic structure and transport phenomena using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and scanning tunneling microscope techniques. My main recent research topic is the Rashba/topological surface states, which are spin-polarized electronic systems formed on nonmagnetic materials. Since spin-dependent transport can be realized by applying an electric field in these systems, they are promising for application in future low-energy consumption spintronic devices. Recent most important publications 1. M. Yamada, T. Hirahara, and S. Hasegawa, “Magnetoresistance Measurements of a Superconducting Surface State of In-Induced and Pb-Induced Structures on Si(111)”, Physical Review Letters 110, 237001 (2013). 2. P. De Padova, P. Vogt, A. Resta, J. Avila, I. Razado-Colambo, C. Quaresima, C. Ottaviani, B. Olivieri, T. Bruhn, T. Hirahara, T. Shirai, S. Hasegawa, M. C. Asensio, and G. Le Lay, “Evidence of Dirac fermions in multilayer silicene”, Applied Physics Letters 102, 163106 (2013). 3. T. Hirahara et al., “Atomic and Electronic Structure of Ultrathin Bi(111) Films Grown on Bi2Te3(111) Substrates: Evidence for a Strain-Induced Topological Phase Transition”, Physical Review Letters 109, 227401 (2012). 4. M. D’Angelo, R. Yukawa, K. Ozawa, S. Yamamoto, T. Hirahara, S. Hasegawa, M. G. Silly, F. Sirotti, and I. Matsuda, “Hydrogen-Induced Surface Metallization of SrTiO3(001)”, Physical Review Letters 108, 116802 (2012). 5. T. Hirahara et al., “Interfacing 2D and 3D topological insulators: Bi(111) bilayer on Bi2Te3”, Physical Review Letters 107, 166801 (2011). 103 Poster title Ultrathin Materials Poster abstract When the thickness of materials becomes thin, novel properties or functions that are dif- ferent from the three-dimensional bulk compound can be expected to appear. First, the quantum size effect will come into play and the electronic states will be discretized. Further reducing the size will induce a dimensional crossover from a three-dimensional material to a two-dimensional one. The most significant experimental realization of this is graphene, which is a monolayer sheet of carbon. On the other hand, there are some cases in which the interesting properties of materials become absent due to the size reduction. This is a key issue in nanotechnology, in which we are currently making use of the intriguing properties mostly found in silicon. As an alternative example, it is well known that superconductivity is usually suppressed in low-dimensional, thin materials. Therefore, understanding the fundamental physical properties of thin materials, especially ultrathin systems in the atomic scale, is a crucial issue in terms of basic science as well as application to nanotechnology. In my poster, I will show several examples of ultrathin materials other than graphene, such as silicene, monoatomic layer superconducting films, and topological systems. 104 First Name Satoshi Last Name Hirata Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Kumamoto Sanctuary, Wildlife Research Center, Kyoto University Address 990 Otao, Misumi, Uki, Kumamoto, 869-3201 Japan Institution University Tel + 81 964 34 1130 Fax + 81 964 34 1131 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.wrc.kyoto-u.ac.jp/kumasa… Participant category General Participant Session field Life / Medical Science Session title Psychiatric disorders: definitions and treatments Research Field Comparative cognitive science, primatology, animal psychology, animal behavior, evolution Statement of your research interests I am interested in the evolutionary basis of human mind and behavior. My major topic is social intelligence in great apes. For example, I have been studying cooperation, deception, and social intelligence in great apes from comparative cognitive science. I have also conducted field work to study wild chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas in Africa and orangutans in Malaysia. Recent most important publications 1. Hirata, S., Matsuda, G., Ueno, A., Fukushima, H., Fuwa, K., Sugama, K., Kusunoki, K., Hiraki, K., Tomonaga, M., & Hasegawa, T. (2013) Brain response to affective pictures in the chimpanzee. Scientific Reports, 3, 1342. 2. Sakai T, Hirata S, Fuwa K, Sugama K, Kusunoki K, Makishima H, Eguchi T, Yamada S, Ogihara N, & Takeshita H. (2012). Fetal brain development in chimpanzees versus humans. Current Biology, 22(18), R791-792. 3. Myowa-Yamakoshi, M., Scola, C., & Hirata, S. (2012) Humans and chimpanzees attend differently to goaldirected actions. Nature Communications, 3, 693 4. Bril, B., Smaers, J., Steele, J., Rein, R., Nonaka, T., Dietrich, G., Biryukova, E., Hirata, S., & Roux, V. (2012) Functional mastery of percussive technology in nut-cracking and stone-flaking actions: experimental comparison and implications for the evolution of the human brain. The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B : Biological Sciences, 367, 59–74. 5. Hirata, S., Fuwa, K., Sugama, K., Kusunoki, K., & Takeshita, H.. (2011) Mechanism of birth in chimpanzees : humans are not unique among primates. Biology Letters, 7, 686-688. Poster Title Humans and chimpanzees attend differently to goal-directed actions Poster Abstract Humans comprehend the actions of others by making inferences about intentional mental states of another. However, little is known about how this capacity develops and whether this is shared with other animals. Here we show the ontogenetic and evolutionary foundations of this ability by comparing the eye movements of 8- and 12-month-old human infants, adults and chimpanzees as they watched videos presenting goal-directed and non-goal-directed actions by an actor. We find that chimpanzees anticipate action goals in the same way as do human adults. Humans and chimpanzees, however, scan goal-directed actions differently. Humans, particularly infants, refer to actors’ faces significantly more than do chimpanzees. In human adults, attentional allocation to an actor’s face changes as the goal-directed actions proceed. In the case of non-goaldirected actions, human adults attend less often to faces relative to goal-directed actions. These findings indicate that humans have a predisposition to observe goal-directed actions by integrating information from the actor. 105 First Name Akiyoshi Last Name Hishikawa Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Department of Chemistry Address Furo-cho, Chikusa, Nagoya, Aichi 464-8602 Institution Nagoya University Tel + 81 52-789 2494 Fax + 81 52-789 2944 E.mail [email protected] URL http://photon.chem.nagoya-u.ac.jp/H… Participant category PGM Session field Chemistry Session title Chemistry of "Origins of Life" Research Field Photo-Physical Chemistry, Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics, Intense Laser Science, Ultrafast Spectroscopy Statement of your research interests We are exploring a new research field of chemistry by utilizing the full functions of light. In particular, we focus on the following research directions: (A) Understanding of ultrafast dynamics of electrons and molecules in intense leaser fields and their control, (B) Ultrafast imaging of chemical reactions, © Generation and application of laser high-order harmonics. Recent most important publications 1. Hikosaka, M. Fushitani, A. Matsuda, T. Endo, Y. Toida, E. Shigemasa, M. Nagasono, K. Tono, T. Togashi, M. Yabashi, T. Ishikawa and A. Hishikawa, “Resonances in three-photon double ionization of Ar in intense extreme ultraviolet free-electron laser fields studied by shot-by-shot photoelectron spectroscopy,” Phys. Rev. A, 88, 023421 (6 pages) (2013). 2. C.-N. Liu, A. Hishikawa, T. Morishita, “Two-electron dynamics in nonlinear double excitation of helium by intense ultrashort extreme-ultraviolet pulses,” Phys. Rev. A, 86, 053426 (13 pages) (2012). 3. A. Hishikawa, M. Fushitani, Y. Hikosaka, A. Matsuda, C.-N. Liu, T. Morishita, E. Shigemasa, M. Nagasono, K. Tono, T. Togashi, H. Ohashi, H. Kimura, Y. Senba, M. Yabashi, and T. Ishikawa, “Enhanced nonlinear double excitation of He in intense EUV laser fields,“ Phys. Rev. Lett., 107, 243003 (5 pages) (2011). 4. A. Matsuda, M. Fushitani, E.J. Takahashi, and A. Hishikawa, ”Visualizing hydrogen atoms migrating in acetylene dication by time-resolved three-body and four-body Coulomb explosion imaging,” Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 13, 8697-8704 (2011). 5. M. Fushitani, A. Matsuda and A. Hishikawa, “Time-resolved EUV photoelectron spectroscopy of dissociating I2 by laser harmonics at 80 nm,” Opt. Express, 19, 9600-9606 (2011). 106 First Name Taro Last Name Hitosugi Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Advanced Institute for Materials Research (AIMR) Address 2-1-1 Katahira, Aoba, Sendai, Japan Institution Tohoku University Tel + 81 80 3334 3048 Fax + 81 22 217 5944 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.wpi-aimr.tohoku.ac.jp/hi Participant category PGM Session field Materials Science Session title Graphene, the “miracle material” Research field Solid state chemistry/physics, surface/interface science Statement of your research interests Strong interest in oxide materials, low dimensional system, and interface properties. Keywords: oxides, Lithium ion battery, scanning tunneling microscopy, thin films, interfaces, heterostructures, graphene, transparent materials Recent most important publications 1. “Impact of lithium-ion ordering pattern on surface electronic states of a lithium-ion-battery cathode material” Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 126104 (2013). 2. “Effects of atomic collisions on the stoichiometry of thin films prepared by pulsed laser deposition” Phys Rev. Lett. 111, 036101 (2013). 3. “Growth processes of lithium titanate thin films deposited by using pulsed laser deposition” Appl. Phys. Lett. 101, 123103 (2012). 4. “Effect of oxygen deficiencies on SrTiO3(001) surface reconstructions” Appl. Phys. Lett. 100, 263106 (2012). 5. “Atomic-scale visualization of initial growth of homoepitaxial SrTiO3 thin film on an atomically ordered substrate" ACS Nano 5, 7967–7971 (2011). 107 First Name Thierry Last Name HOQUET Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory EA 4187 Institut de Recherches Philosophiques de Lyon (IRPHIL) Address 18 rue Chevreul 69007 Lyon France Institution Université Lyon 3 E.mail [email protected] URL http://facdephilo.univ-lyon3.fr/men… Participant category PGM Session field Social Sciences / Humanities Session title Happiness Research Field Philosophy of Life Sciences Statement of your research interests My research focuses on three different topics: (1) eighteenth- and nineteenth-century natural sciences (mostly Buffon and Linnaeus ; natural method in botany) ; (2) Darwin and Darwinism : I focus especially on the concept of variation ; (3) the history of the concept of sex in biology, with an interest for its definition. Dr Hoquet is a scientific editor of the website www.cnrs.buffon.fr, and a member of the Boards of several journals (Critique, Corpus, Bionomina-International Journal for Biological Nomenclature and Terminology). Recent most important publications Two books (in French) : Darwin contre Darwin (Le Seuil, 2009) and Cyborg Philosophie. Penser contre les dualismes (Le Seuil, 2011). Translation of the first edition of the Origin of species in French, Le Seuil, 2013. « Translating natural selection: true concept, but false term? », Bionomina, 3 (2011), pp. 1-23. « Translating “natural selection” in Japanese : from “shizen tõta” to “shizen sentaku”, and back? » (en collaboration avec KIJIMA Taizo), Bionomina, 6 (28 juin 2013), pp. 26–48. «Is sociobiology amendable? Feminist and Darwinian women biologists confront the paradigm of sexual selection », Diogenes, 225 (2010), pp. 113-126. 108 First Name Seiya Last Name Imoto Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Laboratory of DNA Information Analysis, Human Genome Center, The Institute of Medical Science, The University of Tokyo Address 4-6-1 Shirokanedai, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 108-8639, Japan Institution The University of Tokyo Tel + 81 3 5449 5615 Fax + 81 3 5449 5442 E.mail [email protected] URL http://bonsai.hgc.jp/ imoto/ Participant category Chair Session field Mathematics / Informatics Session title Bayesian Statistics Research field Bioinformatics, Systems Biology, Statistics Statement of your research interests His research interests cover statistical analysis of high dimensional data by Bayesian approach, biomedical information analysis, transcriptome data analysis, gene network analysis for computational drug target discovery and resequencing data analysis towards personalized medicine. Recent most important publications 1. M. Kayano, S. Imoto, R. Yamaguchi, S. Miyano (2013) Multi-omics approach for estimating metabolic networks using low-order partial correlations. Journal of Computational Biology, 20(8):571-582. 2. A. Niida, S. Imoto, T. Shimamura, S. Miyano (2012) Statistical model-based testing to evaluate the recurrence of genomic aberrations, Bioinformatics, 28, i115-i120. 3. S. Kawano, T. Shimamura, A. Niida, S. Imoto, R. Yamaguchi, M. Nagasaki, R. Yoshida, C. Print, S. Miyano (2012) Identifying gene pathways associated with cancer characteristics via sparse statistical methods, IEEE/ ACM Transactions on Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, 9(4):966-972. 4. Y. Tamada, S. Imoto, S. Miyano (2011) Parallel algorithm for learning optimal Bayesian network structure, Journal of Machine Learning Research, 12, 2437-2459. 5. K. Kojima, E. Perrier, S. Imoto, S. Miyano (2010) Optimal search on clustered structural constraint for learning Bayesian network structure, Journal of Machine Learning Research, 11, 285-310. 109 First Name Lucile Last Name JOLY-POTTUZ Position held Researcher Laboratory MATEIS UMR 5510 and ELyT Lab Address Bât Blaise Pascal - 1er étage 7 avenue Jean Capelle F-69621 Villeurbanne Institution INSA Lyon Tel + 33 4 72 43 71 02 Fax + 33 4 72 43 79 30 E.mail [email protected] URL http://mateis.insa-lyon.fr/ Participant category General Participant Session field Life / Medical Science Session title Psychiatric disorders: definitions and treatments Research Field Transmission electron microscopy, ceramic materials, nanoindentation Statement of your research interests Developpement of innovating tools to characterize the ceramic materials: nanoindentation inside a transmission electron microscope to determine the plasticity at the nanometer scale transmission electron microscopes techniques to characterize nanoparticles inside biological cells (nanoparticles due to the wear of ceramic implants or nanoparticles used for the therapy of cancer) computer simulations (molecular dynamics, DFT) to better understand the behavior of ceramic materials, and coupling with experimental results Recent most important publications 1. Real time TEM observation of alumina ceramic nano-particles during compression. E. Calvie, L. Joly-Pottuz, C. Esnouf, P. Clément, V. Garnier, J. Chevalier, Y. Jorand, A. Malchère, T. Epicier, K. Masenelli-Varlot, Journal of the European Ceramic Society, 2012, vol. 32, pp. 2067-2071 2. Evidence for the formation of distorted nano-domains involved in the phase transformation of stabilizedzirconia by coupling Convergent Beam Electron Diffraction and in situ TEM nanoindentation. E. Calvié, L. Joly-Pottuz, C. Esnouf, T. Douillard, L. Gremillard, A. Malchère, J. Chevalier, K. Masenelli-Varlot, Acta Materialia, 2013, vol. 61, pp. 174-182 3. A global investigation into in situ nanoindentation experiments on zirconia: from the sample geometry optimization to the stress nanolocalization using convergent beam electron diffraction. E. Calvié, L. Joly-Pottuz, C. Esnouf, T. Douillard, L. Gremillard, A. Malchere, K. Masenelli-Varlot, Journal of Microscopy, 2013, vol. 249 (2), pp. 99-110 4. Internalization pathways into cancer cells of gadolinium-based radiosensitizing nanoparticles. W. Rima, L. Sancey, M.T. Aloy, E. Armandy, G.B. Alcantara, T. Epicier, A. Malchère, L. Joly-Pottuz, Pierre Mowat, François Lux, O.Tillement, B. Burdin, A. Rivoire, C. Boulé, I. Anselme-Bertrand, J. Pourchez, M. Cottier, S. Roux, C. Rodriguez-Lafrasse, P. Perriat, Biomaterials, 2013, vol. 34, pp. 181-195 110 Poster title Innovative tools for characterizing ceramic materials Poster abstract A better understanding of the behavior of the ceramic materials at the nanometer scale may have a great interest in order to enhance their processing or their mechanical properties. Nanoindentation experiments were developed to study and to observe the behavior of nanometer-size nanoparticles. First results obtained are not obvious and may have a strong impact on the compaction process prior to sintering. Another approach was also developed to better characterize the ceramics: a coupling of transmission electron microscopy and simulation works (molecular dynamics and density functional theory). This second approach was developed in the framework of an international laboratory between Lyon and Sendai (ELyT laboratory). 111 First Name Christophe Last Name Josserand Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Institut D’Alembert, UMR 7190 Address Institut D’Alembert, Case 162, Tour 55-65 UPMC, 4, Place Jussieu 75005 Paris Institution CNRS Tel + 33 1 44 27 72 61 Fax + 33 1 44 27 52 59 E.mail [email protected] URL www.lmm.jussieu.fr/ josseran Participant category Chair Session field Physics and Astrophysics Session title Supersolidity and quantum plasticity Research Field Supersolidity, Fluid Mechanics, Wave Turbulence Statement of your research interests With collaborators, we have developed a mean-field model for supersolidity. We show there that crystal order can exist with superfluid properties. One of my main interest is in fluid mechanics where I try to understand the pertinent physical mechanisms involved in the splashing of a liquid drop. I work also on wave-turbulence, in particular on vibrating elastic plates, where the turbulence state is obtained by a balance between rapid oscillating modes and nonlinear terms. Recent most important publications 1. P. Mason, C. Josserand and S. Rica, "Activated Nucleation of Vortices in a Dipole-Blockaded Supersolid Condensate", Phys. Rev. Lett. 109, 045301 (2012). 2. B. Miquel, A. Alexakis, C. Josserand andN. Mordant ``Transition from wave turbulence to dynamical crumpling in vibrated elastic plates", Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 054302 (2013). 3. A. Antkowiak, B. Audoly, C. Josserand, S. Neukirch and M. Rivetti, "Instant fabrication and selection of folded structures using drop impact" PNAS 108, 10400—10404 (2011). 4. L. Duchemin and C. Josserand, "Curvature singularity and film-skating during drop impact", Phys. Fluids 23, 091701 (2011). 5. \item G. Lagubeau, M.A. Fontelos, C. Josserand, A. Maurel, V. Pagneux and P. Petitjeans, "Spreading dynamics of drop impacts", J. Fluid Mech. 713, 50—60 (2012). 112 First Name Aitaro Last Name Kato Position held Researcher Laboratory Earthquake Research Institute, the University of Tokyo Address 113-0032 1-1-1 Yaoyoi, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, Japan Institution University Tel + 81 3 58 41 57 87 Fax + 81 3 56 89 72 34 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.eri.u-tokyo.ac.jp/akato Participant category Chair Session field Earth Science / Environment Session title Earthquakes and Associated Risks Research field Seismology Statement of your research interests I am interested in studying how earthquakes nucleate in the Earth. Based on analysis of continuous seismic waveforms, I have recently been involved with seismicity analysis such as foreshocks, aftershocks and induced seismicity. In addition, because heterogeneity in fault zone may play an important role to concentrate stress, I have imaged highly-resolved crustal structures by deploying many portable seismic stations and discussed the link between the structural anomaly and seismicity. Recent most important publications 1. Kato, A., K. Obara, T. Igarashi, H. Tsuruoka, S. Nakagawa and N. Hirata (2012), Propagation of Slow Slip Leading Up to the 2011Mw 9.0 Tohoku-Oki Earthquake, Science, 335, 705-708, doi : 10.1126/science.1215141. 2. Kato, A., and T. Igarashi (2012), Regional extent of the large coseismic slip zone of the 2011 Mw 9.0 Tohoku-Oki earthquake delineated by on-fault aftershocks, Geophys. Res. Lett., 39, L15301, doi:10.1029/2012GL052220. 3. Kato, A., S. Sakai, K. Obara (2011), A normal-faulting seismic sequence triggered by the 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku Earthquake: Wholesale stress regime changes in the upper plate, Earth Planets Space, 63, 745–748. 4. Kato, A., et al. (2010), Variations of fluid pressure within the subducting oceanic crust and slow earthquakes, Geophys. Res. Lett., 37, L14310, doi:10.1029/2010GL043723. 5. Kato, A., et al. (2009), Reactivation of ancient rift systems triggers devastating intraplate earthquakes, Geophys. Res. Lett., 36, L05301, doi:10.1029/2008GL036450. 113 First Name Iordanis Last Name Kerenidis Position held Researcher Laboratory UMR 7089 Laboratoire d’Informatique Algorithmique: Fondements et Applications Address Université Paris 7 - Paris Diderot LIAFA (Case 7014) Bâtiment Sophie Germain 75205 Paris Cedex 13 Institution CNRS Tel + 33 6 51 08 60 79 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.liafa.univ-paris-diderot Participant category General Participant Session field Mathematics / Informatics Session title Bayesian Statistics Research field quantum computation, complexity theory, algorithms, theoretical computer science, cryptography Statement of your research interests Quantum Information Processing carries the promise to revolutionize the future of information technologies. My long-term vision is a network of quantum and classical devices, where agents have the ability to communicate efficiently and securely. The concrete objectives of my research are to : design and analyse the security of quantum cryptographic protocols; study the power of quantum communication ; use state-of-the-art photonic systems to implement complex communicating two- and multi-party protocols. Recent most important publications 1. Lower bounds on information complexity via zero-communication protocols and applications Iordanis Kerenidis, Sophie Laplante, Virginie Lerays, Jeremie Roland, David Xiao [FOCS 12] 53rd Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science, 2012 2. Optimal bounds for quantum bit commitment Andre Chailloux, Iordanis Kerenidis [FOCS 11] 52th Annual IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science, 2011. 3. Optimal quantum strong coin flipping Andre Chailloux, Iordanis Kerenidis [FOCS 09] 50th Annual IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science, Atlanta, 2009 4. Exponential separations for one-way quantum communication complexity, with applications to cryptography D Gavinsky,J Kempe,I Kerenidis,R Raz,R de Wolf [SICOMP 08] SIAM Journal of Computing, Volume 38, Issue 5, pp. 1695-1708, 2008. [STOC 07] Proceedings of ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing, 2007. 5. Exponential Lower Bound for 2-Query Locally Decodable Codes Iordanis Kerenidis, Ronald de Wolf [JCSS 04, special STOC issue] J Computer and System Sciences (JCSS), 69(3):395-420, 2004 - [STOC 03] Proceedings of ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing, 2004 114 Poster title Quantum Cryptography: in theory and in practice Poster abstract Quantum Information Processing has the potential to revolutionize the future of informa- tion technologies. A tremendous research effort by computer scientists, physicists, mathematicians, engineers, has been put into addressing each of the major challenges in the area, from quantum algorithms and complexity to quantum cryptography, to large-scale realizations of quantum computers. Shor's algorithm for factoring shows that most currently used classical security systems, such as RSA, are vulnerable against quantum computers. In addition, the ability to communicate over quantum channels has made it possible to revisit unconditionally secure cryptography. In one of the most celebrated results in quantum computation, Bennett and Brassard showed that it is possible for two parties to distribute a secret key in a way that is unconditionally secure against all attacks. It is important to note that there have been real implementations of key distribution over hundreds of kilometers. In this poster, I am presenting some fundamental results in the area of quantum cryptography both from a theoretical and experimental perspective. 115 First Name Chika Last Name Kinoshita Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Graduate School of Humanities Address 1-1 Minami Osawa Hachioji-shi, Tokyo - 192-0397, Japan Institution Tokyo Metropolitan University Tel + 81 42 67 72 19 6 E.mail mail [email protected] Participant category General Participant Session field Social Sciences / Humanities Session title Happiness Research field Film studies Statement of your research interests Culture and gender/sexuality, and intermediality. My forthcoming book (from Hosei University Press) examines the film director Kenji Mizoguchi’s films within the context of Japanese modernity, focusing on the issues of women. My current project, titled “pregnancy film,” investigates the history of representation of pregnancy, abortion, and childbirth in Japanese film and popular culture in relation to politics, medicine, and technology. Recent most important publications 1. “The Edge of Montage: A Case of Modernism/Modanizumu in Japanese Cinema.” In Oxford Handbook for Japanese Cinema, edited by Daisuke Miyao, 130-157. New York: Oxford UP, forthcoming, January 2014. 2. “Kakumei zen’ya: Mizoguchi Kenji no Tôjin Okichi (1930 nen)” [Before the Revolution : Mizoguchi Kenji’s The Foreigner’s Okichi (1930)], Eizôgaku [Japanese Journal of Image Arts and Sciences] no. 89 (Winter 2012) : 22-40. 3. “Tsuma no sentaku : sengo minshushugiteki chûzetsu eiga no keifu” [Wife’s Choice: A Genealogy of Abortion Films in the Context of Postwar Democracy]. In Sengo Nihon eiga ron : 1950 nendai o yomu, edited by Mitsuyo Wada-Marciano, 143-70. Tokyo : Seikyû-sha, 2012. 4. “The Benshi Track: Mizoguchi Kenji’s The Downfall of Osen (1935) and the Sound Transition," Cinema Journal 50 no. 3 (Spring 2011) : 1-25. 5. “Saiki suru merodorama: Makino Masahiro no Onna keizu (1942) to kankyaku no kanôsei” [A Reflective Melodrama: Makino Masahiro’s The Genealogy of a Women (1942) and the Possibilities of the Spectator/ Audience]. In Kankyaku eno apurôchi, edited by Fujiki Hideaki, 199-228. Tokyo : Shinwa-sha, 2011. 116 First Name Masaki Last Name Kita Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Laboratory of Bioorganic Chemistry, Division of Chemistry, Faculty of Pure and Applied Sciences, University of Tsukuba Address 1-1-1 Tennodai, Tsukuba, 305-8571, Japan Institution University of Tsukuba Tel + 81 29 853 4526 Fax + 81 29 853 4313 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.chem.tsukuba.ac.jp/kigos Participant category General Participant Session field Life / Medical Science Session title Psychiatric disorders: definitions and treatments Research field Bioorganic chemistry Statement of your research interests The discovery of new bioactive molecules, facilitated by a deeper understanding of nature, will advance our knowledge of biological processes and lead to new strategies to treat disease. My research aim is to clarify the structures and functions of such small key molecules that regulate dynamic living systems. I’m particularly interested in biologically and ecologically unique phenomena, such as molecular evolutions of vertebrate venoms, marine symbiotic relationships, and antitumor compounds of marine origin. Recent most important publications 1. M. Kita, Y. Hirayama, K. Yamagishi, K. Yoneda, R. Fujisawa, H. Kigoshi: Interactions of the Antitumor Macrolide Aplyronine A with Actin and Actin-related Proteins Established by Its Versatile Photoaffinity Derivatives. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 134, 20314–20317 (2012). 2. M. Kita: Bioorganic Studies on the Venom from Duckbill Platypus. Pure Appl. Chem. 84, 1317–1328 (2012). 3. M. Kita, Y. Hirayama, M. Sugiyama, H. Kigoshi: Development of Highly Cytotoxic and Actin-depolymerizing Biotin Derivatives of Aplyronine A. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 50, 9871–9874 (2011). 4. M. Kita, D. StC. Black, O. Ohno, K. Yamada, H. Kigoshi, D. Uemura: Duck-billed Platypus Venom Peptides Induce Ca2+ Influx in Neuroblastoma Cells. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 131, 18038–18039 (2009). 5. D. Uemura, M. Kita, H. Arimoto, M. Kitamura: Recent Aspects of Chemical Ecology -Natural Toxins, Coral Communities, and Symbiotic Relationships-. Pure Appl. Chem. 81, 1093–1111 (2009). 117 Poster title Inhibition of microtubule assembly by an actin-aplyronine A complex Poster abstract The discovery of bioactive natural products often triggers the development of basic concepts in the field of biological sciences, since these compounds have direct physiological and behavioral effects on living organisms. Recent technological advancements including spectroscopic analyses and genetic approaches have provided outstanding opportunities for new discoveries, even in the case of scarce, unstable, and composite compounds. These compounds should provide a rich source of chemical diversity that could be used to design and develop new potentially useful therapeutic agents and pharmacological tools, such as anticancer, antimicrobial, or antiviral drugs. Aplyronine A (ApA) is a rare marine natural product that shows potent antitumor activity. However, its molecular targets and mechanisms of action in cells have remained unclear. By using fluorescence microscopy observations and photoaffinity-tag experiments, we now show that ApA synergistically binds to tubulin in association with actin, inhibits tubulin polymerization, and prevents spindle formation and mitosis in tumor cells. Tubulin-targeting agents have been widely used in cancer chemotherapy. To our knowledge, however, there are no previous descriptions of microtubule inhibitors that also bind to actin and affect microfilament dynamics. Our studies of ApA provide further insights into the molecular mechanisms of structurally diverse natural products that regulate cytoskeletal dynamics 118 First Name Ikuko Last Name Kitaba Position held Researcher Laboratory Kobe University Research Center for Inland Seas (KURCIS) Address 1-1 Rokkodai-cho, Nada, Kobe 657-8501 JAPAN Institution Kobe University Tel + 81 78 803 5748 E.mail [email protected] URL URL http://www.research.kobe-u.ac.jp/fs Participant category General Participant Session field Earth Science / Environment Session title Earthquakes and associated risks Research field Paleoclimate Statement of your research interests My research interests include geomagnetic impact on climate, pollen and diatom-based quantitative environment reconstruction, climate and sea-level changes during the Mid-Pleistocene Climate Transition (MPT), climate change and migration of Homo erectus to Indonesia, growth environment and pollen morphology of extinct beech trees and development of marker grains, specifically for palynology. Recent most important publications 1. Ikuko Kitaba, Masayuki Hyodo, Shigehiro Katoh, David L. Dettman, Hiroshi Sato (2013) Mid-latitude cooling caused by geomagnetic field minimum during polarity reversal, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 110, 1215-1220. 2. Ikuko Kitaba, Masayuki Hyodo, Shigehiro Katoh, Mariko Matsushita (2012) Phase-lagged warming and disruption in climatic rhythm during the Matuyama-Brunhes magnetic polarity transition, Gondwana Research, 21, 595-600. 3. Masayuki Hyodo, Shuji Matsu’ura, Yuko Kamishima, Megumi Kondo, Yoshihiro Takeshita, Ikuko Kitaba, Tohru Danhara, Fachroel Aziz, Iwan Kurniawan, Hisao Kumai (2011) High-resolution record of the MatuyamaBrunhes transition constrains the age of Javanese Homo erectus in the Sangiran Dome, Indonesia, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 108, 19563-19568. 4. Ikuko Kitaba, Mao Harada, Masayuki Hyodo, Shigehiro Katoh, Hiroshi Sato, Mariko Matsushita (2011) MIS 21 and the Mid-Pleistocene Climate Transition: Climate and sea-level variation from a sediment core in Osaka Bay, Japan, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 299, 227-239. 5. Ikuko Kitaba, Chisa Iwabe, Masayuki Hyodo, Shigehiro Katoh, Mariko Matsushita (2009) High-resolution climate stratigraphy across the Matuyama-Brunhes transition from palynological data of Osaka Bay sediments in southwestern Japan, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 119 Poster title Major weakening of geomagnetic field causes climatic cooling Poster abstract Observed correlation between galactic cosmic ray (CR) flux and cloud cover suggested that variations in geomagnetic field intensity may change the climate through modulation of CR flux. However, this hypothesis was not backed up by robust geological evidence. Here we present paleoclimate and paleoenvironment records of five interglacial periods that include two geomagnetic polarity reversals. During the geomagnetic reversal, the shielding effect of the geomagnetic field is greatly reduced and CR flux almost doubled. Two interglacial periods, 19 and 31, contain anomalous cooling intervals within the warmest phase, which corresponds to the Matuyama–Brunhes and Lower Jaramillo geomagnetic reversals, respectively. This contrasts strongly with the typical interglacial periods that do not have any such abnormal cooling during the warmest phase. The cooling occurred when the field intensity dropped to <40% of its present value, for which we estimate >40% increase in CR flux. The climate warmed rapidly when field intensity recovered. A relatively cool climate during these geomagnetic polarity reversals is observed in other regions across the low and middle latitudes. We suggest that geomagnetic field intensity can influence global climate through the modulation of CR flux. 120 First Name Takashi Last Name Kurata Position held Researcher Laboratory Research Institute for Humanity and Nature (RIHN) Address 457-4 Kamigamo-Motoyama, Kita-ku, Kyoto 6038047 JAPAN Institution National Institutes for the Humanities Tel + 81 75 707 2382 Fax + 81 75 707 2513 E.mail [email protected] URL www.chikyu.ac.jp Participant category Speaker Session field Social Sciences / Humanities Session title Happiness Research Field Philosophy, Art, Design, Architecture, Environmental Ethics Statement of your research interests Examining philosophically the new vision of our daily life by comparing the current waves in various genres, such as art, design, architecture and agriculture. At the same time, creating the occasions to dialogue with people in order to share the opinions on related topics within our own society. Recent most important publications Kurata, Takashi (ed.), " Mingei no Lesson : Tsutanasa no Giho (The Lessons of Japanese Folk Crafts : In Search of the Awkward Technique)," Tokyo, 2012. 121 First Name Luc Last Name MALLET Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory UPMC-Inserm U 1127-CNRS UMR 7225 Address ICM – Brain & Spine Institute – Room 3029 Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital 47, Bd de L’Hôpital – 75013 Paris Institution INSERM Tel + 33 1 57 27 43 93 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.icm-institute.org/ Participant category Speaker Session field Life / Medical Science Session title Psychiatric disorders: definitions and treatments Research field Psychiatry, Clinical research, Pathophysiology, Therapeutic innovation Statement of your research interests To study the behavioural aspects of Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) and to develop novel therapies in psychiatry. My main focus of research is the identification of processes involved in the treatment of information by the basal ganglia and its links to psychopathology as well as the development of innovative treatments for severe neuropsychiatric disorders that are resistant to medical therapy. Recent most important publications 1. Burbaud P, Clair AH, Langbour N, Fernandez-Vidal S, Goillandeau M, Michelet T, Bardinet E, Chéreau I, Durif F, Polosan M, Chabardès S, Fontaine D, Magnié-Mauro MN, Houeto JL, Bataille B, Millet B, Vérin M, Baup N, Krebs MO, Cornu P, Pelissolo A, Arbus C, Simonetta-Moreau M, Yelnik J, Welter ML, Mallet L. Neuronal activity correlated with checking behaviour in the subthalamic nucleus of OCD patients. Brain, 2013 Jan ;136(Pt 1):304-17 2. Mallet L, Polosan M, Jaafari N, Baup N, Welter ML, Fontaine D, du Montcel ST, Yelnik J, Chereau I, Arbus C, Raoul S, Aouizerate B, Damier P, Chabardes S, Czernecki V, Ardouin C, Krebs MO, Bardinet E, Chaynes P, Burbaud P, Cornu P, Derost P, Bougerol T, Bataille B, Mattei V, Dormont D, Devaux B, Verin M, Houeto JL, Pollak P, Benabid AL, Agid Y, Krack P, Millet B, Pelissolo A. Subthalamic nucleus stimulation in severe obsessive-compulsive disorder. N Engl J Med 2008; 359: 2121-2134. 3. Welter ML*, Mallet L*, Houeto JL, Karachi C, Czernecki V, Cornu P, Navarro S, Pidoux B, Dormont D, Bardinet E, Yelnik J, Damier P, Agid Y. Internal pallidal and thalamic stimulation in patients with Tourette syndrome. Arch Neurol 2008; 65: 952-957. 4. Mallet L, Schupbach M, N’Diaye K, Remy P, Bardinet E, Czernecki V, Welter ML, Pelissolo A, Ruberg M, Agid Y, Yelnik J. Stimulation of subterritories of the subthalamic nucleus reveals its role in the integration of the emotional and motor aspects of behavior. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2007; 104: 10661-10666. 5. Mallet L, Mesnage V, Houeto JL, Pelissolo A, Yelnik J, Behar C, Gargiulo M, Welter ML, Bonnet AM, Pillon B, Cornu P, Dormont D, Pidoux B, Allilaire JF, Agid Y. Compulsions, Parkinson’s disease, and stimulation. Lancet 2002; 360: 1302-1304. 122 First Name Shigeyuki Last Name Masaoka Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Masaoka Group Address Institute for Molecular Science, National Institutes of Natural Sciences Higashiyama 5-1, Myodaiji, Okazaki 444-8787, JAPAN Institution Institute for Molecular Science Tel + 81 564 59 5587 Fax + 81 564 59-5589 E.mail [email protected] URL http://groups.ims.ac.jp/organizatio… Participant category General Participant Session field Chemistry Session title Chemistry of "Origins of Life" Research Field Inorganic chemistry, Catalysis, Photosynthesis, Electrochemistry Statement of your research interests Chemistry of transition metal complexes toward artificial photosynthesis Recent most important publications 1. Photoinduced Hydrogen Evolution from Water Based on a Z-Scheme Photosynthesis by a Simple Platinum(II) Terpyridine Derivative, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 2012, 51, 7431-7434. 2. Self-assembly of Tubular Microstructures from Mixed-valence Metal Complexes and their Reversible Transformation via External Stimuli, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 2012, 51, 656-659. 3. Kinetics and DFT Studies on Water Oxidation by Ce4+ Catalyzed by [Ru(terpy)(bpy)(OH2)]2+, Chem. Commun., 2012, 48, 239-241. 4. Evidence for Pt(II)-Based Molecular Catalysis in the Thermal Reduction of Water into Molecular Hydrogen, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2009, 131, 8404–8406. 5. Clear Evidence Showing the Robustness of a Highly Active Oxygen-Evolving Mononuclear Ruthenium Complex with an Aqua Ligand, Chem. Lett., 2009, 38, 182-183. Poster title Water Oxidation Catalyzed by Artificial Transition Metal Complexes Poster abstract Water oxidation (2H2O → O2 + 4H+ + 4e–) is considered the main bottleneck in the pro- duction of chemical fuels from sunlight and/or electricity. In nature, the water oxidation is efficiently catalyzed by the oxygen evolving complex (OEC) in photosystem II (PSII). Because the replication or extraction of OEC is extremely difficult, some synthetic molecular catalysts have been investigated in the last decades. However, the development of efficient, robust and abundant metal-based molecular catalysts remains a challenging target. We have investigated the development of water oxidation catalysts by transition metal complexes. Recently, we reported that some mononuclear ruthenium complexes serve as efficient catalysts for this reaction. This finding has become a breakthrough because most of researchers in this field believed that the four-electron process leading to O2 evolution from water could be much more efficiently accelerated by use of two or more metal centers. In this poster, the O2-evolving catalysis of these mononuclear ruthenium complexes, together with the mechanism of the O2-evolving catalysis, will be discussed. 123 First Name Tetsuya Last Name Matsuda Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Tamagawa University Brain Science Institute Address 6-1-1, Tamagawa Gakuen, Machida, Tokyo 194-8610, Japan Institution University Tel + 81 42 739 8265 Fax + 81 42 739 8265 E.mail [email protected] Participant category General Participant Session field Life/Medical Science Session title Psychiatric disorders: definitions and treatments Research Field neuroscience, neuroimaging, psychiatry, social neuroscience Statement of your research interests I am interested in relationship between neural dysfunction and a symptom of psychiatric disorder. I have a neuroimageing technique, especially fMRI. Now I also started to develop new psychiatric clinical treatment technique using fMRI, which is neurofeedback using real-time fMRI. Recent most important publications 1. Ito T, Wu DA, Marutani T, Yamamoto M, Suzuki H, Shimojo S, Matsuda T. Changing the mind? Not really activity and connectivity in the caudate correlates with changes of choice. Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci. 2013 Oct 7. [Epub ahead of print] 2. Yamada M, Camerer CF, Fujie S, Kato M, Matsuda T, Takano H, Ito H, Suhara T, Takahashi H. Neural circuits in the brain that are activated when mitigating criminal sentences. Nature Communications. 2012, 3, 759. 3. Watanabe K, Matsuda T, Nishioka T, Namatame M. Eye gaze during observation of static faces in deaf people. PloS ONE. 2011, 6(2), 216919. 4. Marutani T, Yahata N, Ikeda Y, Ito T, Yamamoto M, Matsuura M, Matsushima E, Okubo Y, Suzuki H, Matsuda T. Functional magnetic resonance imaging study on the effects of acute single administration of paroxetine on motivation-related brain activity. Psychiatry and Clin. Neurosci. 2011, 65(2), 191-198. 5. Motoshita M, Matsuura M, Ohkubo T, Ohkubo H, Kanaka N, Matsushima E, Taira M, Kojima T, Matsuda T. Hyperfrontality in patients with schizophrenia during saccade and antisaccade tasks : a study with fMRI. Psychiatry and Clin. Neurosci. 2009, 63(2), 209-217. Poster Title Neural activity modulation employing Real-time fMRI-based Neuro-feedback Poster Abstract Neuro-feedback refers to the method whereby a subject monitors his/her own neural activity in a particular brain region of interest, and gains the ability to willfully control the level of neural activity. Recently, self-monitoring of neural activity in subcortical and other deep brain areas, as well as areas related to higher-order brain function, became possible with the development of real-time fMRI. The purpose of this research is to determine whether fMRI-based Neuro-feedback training holds promise for improving the emotional and social cognition of individuals with psychiatric disorders which have been difficult to treat using drugs alone. This is a nascent research area as there have been few reports so far on fMRI-based neurofeedback training for the treatment of psychiatric disorders such as those mentioned above. It is evident that subjects are able to increase amygdala activity through neuro-feedback training, and that in order to willfully control amygdala activity, simultaneous activity in the insula and MPFC are necessary. From these results, it appears that the rehabilitation of psychiatric patients may be a plausible application of biofeedback training. 124 First Name Mitsuo Last Name Matsumoto Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Osaka School of International Public Policy (OSIPP) Address 1-31 Machikane-yama, Toyonaka, Osaka 560-0043 Japan Institution Osaka University Tel + 81 6 6850 5645 Fax + 81 6 6850 5656 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.osipp.osaka-u.ac.jp/en/s Participant category General Participant Session field Social Sciences / Humanities Session title Happiness Research field administrative law, environmental law, water law Statement of your research interests I am a researcher of administrative law, environmental law, water law, and legal philosophy. My researches focus on issues surrounding the sustainability of our society, economy and the environment from legal perspective, such as integrated governance of waters, energy path, and land use. I try to improve the quality of my interdisciplinary study by limiting the number of locations (i.e. balancing flood mitigation, diversion for irrigation and hydropower generation, and fish conservation in the Yodo River Basin). Recent most important publications 1. Restructuring the Risk Regulations for Nuclear Facilities: on the Regulatory Reform after March 11th, 2011 (forthcoming) (in Japanese) 2. The Commons in Transition: between Field Studies and Theories (co-edited with Teruyuki Shinbo), Nakanishi-ya Shuppan ( 2012) (in Japanese) 3. The Precautionary Principle in Environmental Law: a Comment on the Paper Presented by Professor Otsuka in Risk Society and the Law, Yuhikaku (2010), pp.72-77. (in Japanese) 4. A Deliberation on the Governance of the Klamath River Basins in the United States : An Introduction to the Integrated Governance of Forests, River Basins, and the Coastal Areas, the Shigin Management Information Vol.109, pp.1-9, 2009) (in Japanese) 5. Legal Perspective of Governance of River Basins in Governance of Waters (Koichiro Kuraji ed.), Toshindo Publishing Co., (2008) (in Japanese) Poster title Legal Reform for the Governance of Waters Poster abstract Japan is located in the Monsoon Asia, it has significant amount of annual precipitation in the form of rain in the south and of snow in the north. Although it suffers from flood every year, the amount of available water resources per capita is very limited. The supply -demand balance of water resources is tight in big cities. Moreover, fish catches have declined significantly. Why can these phenomena occur, how can we define the goals and how can these problems can be solved in cost-effective ways? Instead of depending too heavily on technological solutions (i.e. dams or desalination plants), my research explores legal solutions based on historical analysis of the underlying issues especially when they are cost-effective. Firstly, to mitigate flood damages to the society, the possibility of “river basin flood mitigation ordinances” (land use regulation of flood plains), are explored. Secondly, to coordinate the supply-demand balance, sustainable use of groundwater through local ordinances and water transfer are recommended. Thirdly, to mitigate the negative impact to the environment especially ecosystems, index species (i.e. salmons and sweet fish) are chosen and plural alternatives are explored (i.e. to maintain, renew or remove the dam while assessing the impact to the index species). 125 First Name Tomoaki Last Name Matsuura Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Bioenvironmental Science Address 2-1 Yamdaoka, Suita, Osaka 565-0871 Department of Biotechnology, Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University Institution Osaka Univesity Tel + 81 6 6879 4172 Fax + 81 6 6879 7428 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.bio.eng.osaka-u.ac.jp/ez… Participant category Chair Session field Chemistry Session title Chemistry of "Origins of Life" Research Field directed evolution, protein engineering, artificial cell, membrane protein, liposomes Statement of your research interests My interest is to develop technologies for engineering proteins, and to generate novel proteins. For this purpose, I use a cell-size microcompartment called liposomes. Recent most important publications 1. Okano, T., Matsuura, T., Suzuki, H., and Yomo, T. (2013). Cell-free Protein Synthesis in a Microchamber Revealed the Presence of an Optimum Compartment Volume for High-order Reactions. ACS Synth Biol. 2. Fujii, S., Matsuura, T., Sunami, T., Kazuta, Y., and Yomo, T. (2013). In vitro evolution of alpha-hemolysin using a liposome display. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 110, 16796-16801. 3. Okano, T., Matsuura, T., Kazuta, Y., Suzuki, H., and Yomo, T. (2012). Cell-free protein synthesis from a single copy of DNA in a glass microchamber. Lab Chip 12, 2704-2711. 4. Nishimura, K., Matsuura, T., Nishimura, K., Sunami, T., Suzuki, H., and Yomo, T. (2012). Cell-free protein synthesis inside giant unilamellar vesicles analyzed by flow cytometry. Langmuir 28, 8426-8432. 5. Nishikawa, T., Sunami, T., Matsuura, T., Ichihashi, N., and Yomo, T. (2012). Construction of a gene screening system using giant unilamellar liposomes and a fluorescence-activated cell sorter. Analytical chemistry 84, 5017-5024. 126 First Name Satoshi Last Name Mihara Position held Senior Researcher or Professor Laboratory High Energy Accelerator Research Organization Address 1-1 Oho Tsukuba 305-0801 Ibaraki, Japan Institution KEK Tel + 81 29 864 5679 Fax + 81 29 864 7831 E.mail [email protected] Participant category PGM Session field Physics and Astrophysics Session title Supersolidity and quantum plasticity Research Field Elemental Particle, Rare decays of muon, Radiation detector Statement of your research interests Elementary particles are ultimate components of matter and engage in forces interplaying between them. The elementary particle physics aims at describing their behavior in a unified framework based on experimental observations to understand the growth of the universe from its birth. Tremendous attempts have been made at different energies to this end although even further effort is necessary to achieve the goal. This fact makes the research of elementary particles even more interesting. Recent most important publications S. Mihara, J.P. Miller, P. Paradisi, and G. Piredda Annu. Rev. Nucl. Part. Sci. 2013:63:531-552 J. Adam et al. (MEG Collaboration) Eur. Phys. J C73:2365, (2013) J. Adam et al. (MEG Collaboration) Phys. Rev. Lett. 110:201801, (2013) S. Mihara JOP Conference Series408:012017, (2013) S. Mihara JOP Conference Series 308:012009, (2011) 127 First Name Shuichi Last Name Murakami Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Department of Physics Address Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8551, Japan Institution Tokyo Institute of Technology Tel + 81 3 5734 2747 Fax + 81 3 5734 2739 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.stat.phys.titech.ac.jp/m… Participant category General Participant Session field Materials Science Session title Graphene, the "miracle material" Research Field condensed matter physics theory, spintronics, topological phases Statement of your research interests My research is on theories of condensed matter physics. In particular, my research interest is on spin transport phenomena in solids, such as spin Hall effect in semiconductors and metals. It also includes topological insulators and their novel physical phenomena. My research is not limited to electronic phenomena, but I am also interested in various topological phenomena caused by geometric phases in various kinds of particles in solids, such as photons, magnons, and plasmons. Recent most important publications 1. R. Takahashi and S. Murakami, "Gapless Interface States between Topological Insulators with Opposite Dirac Velocities ", Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 2011, 166805-1 –- 166805-4. R. 2. Matsumoto and S. Murakami, "Theoretical prediction of rotating magnon wavepacket in ferromagnets", Phys. Rev. Lett.106, 2011, 197202-1 — 197202-4. 3. S. Murakami, "Quantum Spin Hall Effect and Enhanced Magnetic Response by Spin-Orbit Coupling", Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 2006, 236805-1 — 236805-4. 4. M. Onoda, S. Murakami, N. Nagaosa, "Hall Effect of Light", Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 2004, 083901-1 — 083901-4. 5. S. Murakami, N. Nagaosa and S.-C. Zhang, "Dissipationless quantum spin current at room temperature", Science 301, 2003, 1348 — 1351. Poster title Topological phases in condensed matter physics Poster abstract One of the recent hot topics in condensed matter physics is various topological phases realized in materials. They include quantum Hall systems, which were experimentally found in 1980, and topological insulators, which were theoretically proposed in 2005 and experimentally confirmed in 2007. In these systems, the interior is insulating and not conducting electric current, whereas the system boundaries (edges or surfaces) are metallic. This property persists even if the material is cut into two; the section then immediately becomes a surface, and it becomes metallic. This novel property is attributed to a topological order in the material. It is interesting that such an abstract mathematical concept is hidden in real materials. In my poster presentation, we explain these concepts for electrons in real materials. Recently we are also extending such a concept into other particles in condensed materials. The particles to be studied include photons (light) and magnons (spin waves) in magnets. In my poster we also explain these theories, and show how the concept of topological order is universally found in various particles in condensed materials. 128 First Name Makoto Last Name Naruse Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory National Institute of Information and Communications Technology Address 4-2-1 Nukui-kita, Koganei, Tokyo 184-8795, Japan Institution National Institute of Information and Communications Technology Tel + 81 42 327 6794 Fax + 81 42 327 7035 E.mail [email protected] URL https://sites.google.com/site/makot… Participant category General Participant Session field Physics and Astrophysics Session title Supersolidity and quantum plasticity Research Field Photonics, informatics Statement of your research interests Nanophotonics, photo-system physics, information photonics, network science, complex system modeling Recent most important publications 1. M. Naruse, N. Tate, M. Aono, and M. Ohtsu: Information physics fundamentals of nanophotonics, Reports on Progress in Physics, Vol. 76, No. 5, pp. 056401 1-50, April 2013. 2. M. Aono, M. Naruse, S.-J. Kim, M. Wakabayashi, H. Hori, M. Ohtsu, M. Hara: Amoeba-inspired Nanoarchitectonic Computing: Solving Intractable Computational Problems using Nanoscale Photoexcitation Transfer Dynamics, Langmuir, Vol. 29, No. 24, pp. 7557-7564, April 2013 3. M. Naruse, M. Aono, S.-J. Kim, T. Kawazoe, W. Nomura, H. Hori, M. Hara, and M. Ohtsu: Spatiotemporal dynamics in optical energy transfer on the nanoscale and its application to constraint satisfaction problems, Physical Review B, Vol. 86, No. 12, pp. 125407 1-10, September 2012. 4. M. Naruse, N. Tate, and M. Ohtsu: Optical security based on near-field processes at the nanoscale, Journal of Optics, Vol. 14, No. 9, pp. 094002 1-13, July 2012. 5. M. Naruse, Y. Liu, W. Nomura, T. Yatsui, M. Aida, L. B. Kish, and M. Ohtsu: Stochastic processes in light-assisted nanoparticle formation, Applied Physics Letters, Vol. 100, No. 19, pp. 193106 1-5, May 2012. Poster Title Near-field Nanophotonics for Computing and Security Poster Abstract There is a great demand for novel computing devices and architectures that can overcome the limitations of conventional technologies based solely on electron transfer, including the need to reduce energy consumption and solve computationally demanding problems. Security is becoming ubiquitously important to safeguard against threats. A promising solution is near-field nanophotonics, which has been extensively studied with the aim of unveiling and exploiting light–matter interactions that occur at a scale below the wavelength of light, and recent progress made in experimental technologies—both in nanomaterial fabrication and in characterization—is driving further advancements in the field. We demonstrate that the dynamics of optical energy transfer mediated by near-fields interactions can be exploited to solve solution searching and decision making problems. By introducing simple state-filling mechanisms for controlling the energy transfer among multiple quantum dots, we successfully solved a constraint satisfaction problem, the satisfiability problem (SAT), and the multi-armed bandit problem. The emergent intellectual abilities of these near-field nanophotonic systems are attributed to the probabilistic and nonlocal nature inherent in the optical-near-field–mediated energy transfer dynamics. Also, we theoretically and experimentally demonstrate information security applications, such as information hiding and authentication, by using hierarchical properties of optical near-fields. 129 First Name Hiromichi Last Name Niikura Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Attosecond Laboratory, Waseda University Address Department of Applied Physics Waseda University Okubo3-4-1,Shinjyuku, Tokyo 169-8555, Japan Institution Waseda University Tel + 81 3 5286 2982 Fax + 81 3 5286 3487 E.mail [email protected] Participant category General Participant Session field Physics and Astrophysics Session title Supersolidity and quantum plasticity Research field Attosecond physics Statement of your research interests I am interested in developing new approaches to generate ultra-short, attosecond, EUV pulses and to measure electron and nuclear dynamics in atoms and molecules with attosecond time-resolution. Recent most important publications. Recent most important publications 1. “Sub-laser-cycle electron pulses for probing molecular dynamics”H. Niikura, F. Légaré, R. Hasbani, M. Ivanov, A. D. Bandrauk, D. M. Villeneuve and P. B. Corkum, Nature 417, 917-922 (2002). 2. “Probing molecular dynamics with attosecond resolution using correlated wave packet pairs”H. Niikura, F. Légaré, R. Hasbani, M. Ivanov, D. M. Villeneuve and P. B. Corkum, Nature 421, 826-829 (2003). 3. “Tomographic Imaging of Molecular Orbitals"J. Itatani, J. Levesque, D. Zeidler, H. Niikura, H. Pepin, J. C. Kieffer, P. B. Corkum and D. M. Villeneuve, Nature 432, 867-871 (2004). 4. “Mapping molecular orbital symmetry on high-order harmonic generation spectrum using two-color laser fields”, H. Niikura, N. Dudovich, D. M.Villeneuve and P. B. Corkum, Phys.Rev.Lett.105, 053003 (2010). 5. “Probing the Spatial Structure of a Molecular Attosecond Electron Wave Packet Using Shaped Recollision Trajectories”, H. Niikura, Hans Jakob Wörner, D. M. Villeneuve, and P. B. Corkum, Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 093004 (2011). Poster title Measuring attosecond electron wavepacket motion in molecules with a high-harmonic spectroscopy Poster abstract Achieving attosecond time resolution allows us to measure electron dynamics in the valence state of molecules with the vibrational motion essentially frozen. Two approaches have been demonstrated to probe attosecond dynamics : to use optical pulses and so-called re-colliding electron pulses. The mechanism behind the measurements is the tunnel ionization and electron re-collision process which occurs in intense laser fields. When gaseous molecules (or atoms) are exposed in intense laser fields, an electron of molecules is ejected to the ionization continuum at the peak of the laser fields. Within less than one optical period, the electron returns to the parent molecules with accelerated by the laser field. Upon re-collision between the ionized electron and the parent molecules, the physical processes such as electron scattering, second ionization, and high-harmonic emission can occur. The high-harmonic emission includes attosecond optical pulses and can be utilized to probe attosecond dynamics. In addition, the spectral amplitude, phase and polarization of high-harmonics emitted from molecules carry information on the electronic and vibrational structure of the molecule and their attosecond dynamics. We demonstrate experimentally and theoretically that the process can be used to measure electron dynamics in molecules with attosecond time-resolution. 130 First Name Alexandre Last Name OBERTELLI Position held Researcher Laboratory DSM/IRFU/SPhN Address Service de Physique Nucléaire CEA Saclay Orme des Merisiers, bâtiment 703 91191 Gif sur Yvette cedex France Institution CEA E.mail [email protected] Participant category General Participant Session field Physics and Astrophysics Session title Supersolidity and quantum plasticity Research field Quantum mechanics, nuclear physics, detectors, complexity, astrophysics Statement of your research interests Researcher in nuclear physics at CEA Saclay from 2006, I perform experiments at Radioactive Ion beam facilties to investigate new nuclear phenomena. My research philosophy could be "define unique setups for unique measurements". I am currently a JSPS fellow at the RIKEN Nishina Center (close to Tokyo) for a program supported by the European Research Council. I am now investigating new developments to measure some of the (believed) most relevant nuclear reactions for the synthesis of elements in the universe. Recent most important publications 1. Windowless thin solid hydrogen target: CHyMENE, A. Gillibert et al., Eur. Phys. Jour. A 49, 155 (2013). 2. Limited asymmetry dependence of correlations from single nucleon transfer, F. Flavigny, A. Gillibert, L. Nalpas, A. Obertelli et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 110,122503 (2013). 3. Nonsudden limits of Heavy-Ion induced knockout reactions, F. Flavigny, A. Obertelli et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 108, 252501 (2012). 4. AGATA Advanced Gamma Tracking Array, S. Akkoyun et al., Nucl. Instr. Meth. and Res. A 668, 26 (2012). 5. The role of triaxiality for the coexistence and evolution of shapes in light krypton isotopes, M. Girod, J.-P. Delaroche, A. Goergen, A. Obertelli, Phys. Lett. B 676, 39 (2009). Poster title Origins and structure of nuclear matter Poster abstract Atomic nuclei are essentially governed by the strong interaction and quantum mechanical laws. The exploration of unstable nuclei (most of them have not been observed yet) reveals new features of nuclear structure. In this poster are introduced new experimental setups (recent or future projects) that are dedicated to very exotic nuclei or rare nuclear reactions. These studies require innovative developments on detection systems, cryogenics and high-intensity ion sources. As few-body complex systems, nuclei may represent the ideal laboratory to investigate the emergence of complexity in the quantum world. 131 First Name Toshio Last Name Ohnishi Position held Researcher Laboratory Faculty of Economics Address 6-19-1 Hakozaki, Higashi-ku, Fukuoka, JAPAN 812-8581 Institution Kyushu University Tel + 81 92 642 7177 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.econ.kyushu-u.ac.jp/engl… Participant category Speaker Session field Mathematics / Informatics Session title Bayesian Statistics Session topic Dual roles of maximizing likelihood and Shannon entropy Research Field Bayesian prediction, model averaging, conjugate prior, generalized linear model, food safety science Statement of your research interests My research is in Bayesian statistics, and specifically in revealing theoretical aspects of its nice performance. I am currently interested in the model averaging and the prediction problem. I focus attention on dualistic roles of the maximization of the likelihood and that of the Shannon entropy, two of the most important notions in statistics. My research pursuits a close linkage between information science and physics such as thermodynamics and electromagnetism. Recent most important publications 1. Ohnishi, T., Yanagimoto, T. (2013): Twofold structure of duality in Bayesian model averaging, Journal of the Japan Statistical Society, 43, 29-55. 2. Yanagimoto, T., Ohnishi, T. (2011): Saddlepoint condition on a predictor to reconfirm the need for the assumption of a prior distribution, Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference, 141, 1990-2000. 3. Ohnishi, T., Yanagimoto, T. (2010): Duality induced from conjugacy in the curved exponential family, Journal of the Japan Statistical Society, 40, 23-43. 4. Yanagimoto, T., Ohnishi, T. (2009): Bayesian prediction of a density function in terms of e-mixture, Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference, 139, 3064-3075. 5. Ohnishi, T., Yanagimoto, T. (2003): Electrostatic views of Stein-type estimation of location vectors, Journal of the Japan Statistical Society, 33, 39-64. 132 First Name Miho Last Name Ohsugi Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Ohsugi Laboratory, Department of Life Sciences, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo Address Komaba 3-8-1, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 153-8902 Japan Institution The University of Tokyo Tel + 81 3 5454 6639 E.mail [email protected] Participant category PGM Session field Life / Medical Science Session title Psychiatric disorders: definitions and treatments Research Field Cell Biology Statement of your research interests Mitosis is a process whereby a complete copy of the genetic information is distributed to each daughter cell. This process is critically important, with even small errors leading to aneuploidy or cell death. My research interests focus on the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying the dynamic mitotic process in mammalian cells. In particular, I am interested in the differences and similarities in mitosis between somatic cells and early-stage embryos. Recent most important publications 1. Park, S., Komata,M., Inoue, F., Yamada, K., Nakai, K., Ohsugi, M.*, and Shirahige, K.* (2013). Inferring the choreography of parental genomes during fertilization from ultralarge-scale whole-transcriptome analysis. Genes. Dev. in press 2. Kitajima, T.S., Ohsugi, M., and Ellenberg, J. (2011). Complete kinetochore tracking reveals error-prone homologous chromosome biorientation in Mammalian oocytes. Cell 146, 568-581. 3. Oshimori, N., Li, X., *Ohsugi, M., and *Yamamoto, T. (2009). Cep72 regulates the localization of key centrosomal proteins and proper bipolar spindle formation. EMBO J 28, 2066-2076. 4. Ohsugi, M., Adachi, K., Horai, R., Kakuta, S., Sudo, K., Kotaki, H., Tokai-Nishizumi, N., Sagara, H., Iwakura, Y., and *Yamamoto, T. (2008). Kid-mediated chromosome compaction ensures proper nuclear envelope formation. Cell 132, 771-782. 5. Oshimori, N., Ohsugi, M., and *Yamamoto, T. (2006). The Plk1 target Kizuna stabilizes mitotic centrosomes to ensure spindle bipolarity. Nat Cell Biol 8, 1095-1101. 133 First Name Tsubasa Last Name Otake Position held Researcher Laboratory Laboratory of Environmental Geology Address Kita 13, Nishi 8, Kita-ku, Sapporo, Hokkaido 060-8628, Japan Institution Hokkaido University Tel + 81 11 706 6323 Fax + 81 11 706 6323 E.mail [email protected] URL http://otake283.web.fc2.com/Tsubasa… Participant category General Participant Session field Earth Science / Environment Session title Earthquakes and Associated Risks Research Field Geochemistry Statement of your research interests Early Earth (origin of life, atmospheric evolution, co-evolution of biosphere and Earth’ surface environments), Economic Geology (hydrothermal systems, iron deposits, rare earth elements, diagenesis of sediment), Experimental Geochemistry, Stable isotope, Transformation of minerals Recent most important publications 1. Furukawa, Y., Otake, T., Ishiguro, T., Nakazawa, H., and Kakegawa, T. (2012) Abiotic formation of valine peptides under conditions of high temperature and high pressure. Origin of Life and Evolution of Biospheres 42, 519-531. 2. Otake, T., Taniguchi, T., Furukawa, Y., Kawamura, F., Nakazawa, H., Kakegawa, T. (2011) Stability of amino acids and their oligomerization under high-pressure conditions: implications for prebiotic chemistry. Astrobiology 11, 799-813. 3. Otake, T., Wesolowski, D.J., Anovitz, L. M., Allard, L. F., and Ohmoto, H. (2010) Mechanisms of iron oxide transformations in hydrothermal systems. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 74, 6141–6156. 4. Hoashi, M., Bevacqua, D. C., Otake, T., Watanabe, Y., Hickman, A. H., Utsunomiya, S., and Ohmoto, H. (2009) Evidence of the early evolution of oxygenic photoautotrophs in 3.46 Billion-year-old haematite crystals from Pilbara, Western Australia. Nature Geoscience 2, 301–306. 5. Otake, T., Lasaga, A. C., and Ohmoto, H. (2008) Ab initio calculations for equilibrium fractionations in multiple sulfur isotope systems. Chemical Geology 249, 357–376. 134 Poster title Co-evolution of life and Earth indicated from Fe-rich rocks Poster abstract Earth’s surface environments, which are greatly influenced by the biological activities, have evolved through geologic history. One of the most significant events that occurred on Early Earth (i.e., before 2 billion years ago) is the emergence of oxygen-producing bacteria and the subsequent oxygenation of atmosphere and ocean since it is thought to further promote the evolution of life (e.g., eukaryotes). The transition in redox conditions on the Earth’s surface is also important for the formation of giant metal (e.g., iron, uranium) deposits that we mine today because some metals change their chemical behaviors with redox conditions. However, the timings of the emergence of oxygen-producing bacteria and oxygenation of the Earth’s surface environments are not well constrained. Therefore, the goal of my research is to identify the timings based on geochemical signatures recorded in rocks that were chemically precipitated from ancient oceans. My current research is focused to examine enrichments of iron and chromium, both of which are considered to be redoxsensitive elements, in chemical sedimentary rocks in South Africa that were formed 3.2 billion years ago. Geochemcial and isotopic study of the rocks may suggest that a part of ocean had been already oxygenated by 3.2 billion years ago. 135 First Name François Last Name PéTRéLIS Position held Researcher Laboratory UMR 8550 (LPS-ENS) Address 24, rue Lhomond, 75005 Paris Institution CNRS Tel + 33 1 44 32 25 70 E.mail [email protected] Participant category PGM Session field Physics and Astrophysics Session title Supersolidity and quantum plasticity Research Field Nonlinear Physics, Geophysics, Statistical Physics, Dynamo instability Statement of your research interests Nonlinear processes and instabilities in physics with applications to geophysics, astrophysics or theoretical physics. In particular, dynamo effect and dynamical evolution of astrophysical and geophysical magnetic fields. Also, instabilities and effects of fluctuations on instabilities. Recent most important publications 1. F. Petrelis, A. Alexakis, “Anomalous exponent at the onset of an instability”, Physical Review Letters (108), 014501, (2012) 2. F. Petrelis, J. Besse, J-P Valet, “Plate tectonics may control geomagnetic reversal frequency”, Geophysical Research Letters (38), L19303 (2011) 3. Petrelis F, Fauve S, Dormy E, Valet J-P, “Simple Mechanism for Reversals of Earth’s Magnetic Field”, Physical Review Letters (102), 144503 (2009). 4. Berhanu M, Monchaux R, Fauve S, Mordant N, Petrelis F, Chiffaudel A, Daviaud F, Dubrulle B, Marie L, Ravelet F, Bourgoin M, Odier P, Pinton JF, Volk R, “Magnetic field reversals in an experimental turbulent dynamo”, Europhysics Letters 77, 59001 (2007). 5. Monchaux R., Berhanu M., Bourgoin M., Moulin M., Odier Ph ., Pinton J. -F., Volk R., Fauve S., Mordant N., Petrelis F, Chiffaudel A. , Daviaud F., Dubrulle B., Gasquet C., Marie L., Ravelet F., “Generation of a magnetic field by dynamo action in a turbulent flow of liquid sodium”, Physical Review Letters 98 (4) 044502 (2007). 136 First Name Damien Last Name QUERLIOZ Position held Researcher Laboratory UMR 8622 Institut d’Electronique Fondamentale (IEF) Address Bat 220 rue André Ampère Univ Paris-Sud 91405 Orsay Institution CNRS Tel + 33 1 69 15 33 58 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.ief.u-psud.fr/ querlioz/ Participant category General Participant Session field Mathematics / Informatics Session title Bayesian Statistics Research field Nanoelectronics Statement of your research interests Nanoelectronics devices provide fantastic opportunities for electronic systems, offering new functions in an extremely energy efficient way. However, they also possess less desirable features like variability, and the difficulty to achieve acceptable yield. Fully exploiting nanoelectronics potential thus calls for novel architectures and design approaches. I am developing approaches to exploit nanoelectronics, able to process the huge flow of natural data modern systems are confronted to. I am specially interested in the bioinspired road. Biology is indeed able to exploit its own nanodevices - which in some aspects are similar to the ones we are fabricating - in a fantastically efficient way. My two major inspirations are synapses from the brain (ANR COGNISPIN project), and a Bayesian interpretation of Biological signaling mechanisms (CNRSI/MI DEFIBAYES and FP7 BAMBI projects). Recent most important publications D. Querlioz, O. Bichler, P. Dollfus and C. Gamrat, "Immunity to Device Variations in a Spiking Neural Network with Memristive Nanodevices," IEEE Transactions on Nanotechnology, vol. 12, num. 3, p. 288 (2013). M. Suri, D. Querlioz, O. Bichler, G. Palma, E. Vianello, D. Vuillaume, C. Gamrat, and B. DeSalvo, "Bio-Inspired Stochastic Computing Using Binary CBRAM Synapses", IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices, vol. 60, num. 7, p. 2402 (2013). M. Suri, O. Bichler, D. Querlioz, G. Palma, E. Vianello, D. Vuillaume, C. Gamrat, B. DeSalvo, "CBRAM Devices as Binary Synapses for Low-Power Stochastic Neuromorphic Systems: Auditory (Cochlea) and Visual (Retina) Cognitive Processing Applications", IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM), p 10.3, 2012. Poster Title The DEFIBAYES project Poster Abstract The DEFIBAYES project (funded by Mission pour l’Interdisciplinarité du CNRS) explores the design of a novel low power computing paradigm for electronics. It exploits new kinds of magnetic electron devices and takes its original inspiration in the biological signaling mechanisms. Its core idea is to perform Bayesian probabilities computation instead of deductive logic, which has implications on all levels of the system design. The project follows an integrated research from nanotechnology to the macroscopic application and aims at applications in robotics and ubiquitous computing. 137 First Name Gwénaël Last Name RAPENNE Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory UPR 8011 Centre d’élaboration de matériaux et d’études structurales (CEMES) Address BP 94347 29 rue Jeanne Marvig 31055 Toulouse Cedex 4 Institution Université de Toulouse Tel + 33 5 62 25 78 41 Fax + 33 5 62 25 79 99 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.cemes.fr/index.php?optio Participant category PGM Session field Chemistry Session title Chemistry of "Origins of Life" Research field Molecular machines, molecular synthesis, STM, molecular motors, molecular vehicles Statement of your research interests My research projects focuses on technomimetic molecules with rotary motions, including gears, wheelbarrows and motors. Following the bottom-up approach the synthesis of technomimetic molecules grants access to the study of mechanical properties at the molecular level. These molecules are designed to operate as single molecules on surfaces under the control of the tip of a scanning tunneling or atomic force microscope. Recent most important publications 1. Synthesis of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon-based nanovehicles equiped with triptycene wheels, H.P. Jacquot de Rouville, R. Garbage, R.E. Cook, A.R. Pujol, A.M. Sirven, G. Rapenne, Chem. Eur. J. 2012, 18, 3023. 2. Synthesis and STM imaging of symmetric and dissymmetric ethynyl-bridged dimers of boron-subphthalocyanine bowl-shaped nano-wheels H.P. Jacquot de Rouville, R. Garbage, F. Ample, A. Nickel, J. Meyer, F. Moresco, C. Joachim, G. Rapenne, Chem. Eur. J. 2012, 18, 8925. 3. Molecule concept-nanocars: chassis, wheels and motors? C. Joachim, G. Rapenne, ACS Nano, 2013, 7, 11. 4. Controlled clockwise and anticlockwise rotation of a molecular motor U.G.E. Perera, F. Ample, H. Kersell, Y. Zhang, J. Echeverria, M. Grisolia, G. Vives, G. Rapenne, C. Joachim, S.-W. Hla, Nature Nanotech. 2013, 8, 46. 5. Directional molecular sliding at room temperature on a silicon runway X. Bouju, F. Chérioux, S. Coget, G. Rapenne, F. Palmino, Nanoscale 2013, 5, 7005. 138 Poster title Design, synthesis and manipulation of technomimetic molecules: Molecular wheels, nanovehicles, rotors and motors Poster abstract In the macroscopic world, the movement of rotation is at the source of many examples of machines and motors. Recent advances in the imaging and manipulation of single molecules has stimulated much interest in the synthesis of molecules exhibiting unique mechanical properties. Technomimetic molecules [1] are molecules designed to imitate macroscopic objects at the molecular level, also transposing the motions that these objects are able to undergo. In this talk we will present the preparation and single-molecule study on functional nanovehicles i.e. molecular vehicles capable to transport a cargo and unidirectional molecular motor. The nanovehicles [2] with two (wheelbarrow in this case) or four triptycene [3] wheels are assembled around a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon platform. The molecular motor[4] is built around a ruthenium center coordinated to a cyclopentadienyl ligand terminated with five ferrocene electroactive groups. The synthesis of the motor will be presented as well as variable temperature NMR experiments, STM study and electrochemistry studies showing the control of the unidirectional rotation[5]. [1] (a) G. Rapenne, Org. Biomol. Chem. 2005, 3, 1165 ; (b) C. Joachim, G. Rapenne, ACS Nano, 2013, 7, 11. [2] (a) L. Grill, F. Moresco, G. Rapenne, S. Stojkovic, X. Bouju, C. Joachim, Nature Nanotech. 2007, 2, 95; (b) G. Rapenne, G. JimenezBueno, Tetrahedron, 2007, 63, 7018. [3] H.P. Jacquot de Rouville, R. Garbage, R.E. Cook, A.R. Pujol, A.M. Sirven, G. Rapenne, Chem. Eur. J. 2012, 18, 3023. [4] G. Vives, H.P. Jacquot de Rouville, A. Carella, J.P. Launay, G. Rapenne, Chem. Soc. Rev. 2009, 38, 1551. [5] U.G.E. Perera, F. Ample, H. Kersell, Y. Zhang, J. Echeverria, M. Grisolia, G. Vives, G. Rapenne, C. Joachim, S.-W. Hla, Nature Nanotech. 2013, 8, 46. 139 First Name Vincent Last Name Renard Position held Researcher Laboratory UMR_E 9001 Service de Physique Statistique, de Magnétisme et de supraconductivité (SPSMS) CEA/UJF Address CEA/INAC SPSMS 17 avenue des Martyrs 38054 Grenoble Cedex 9 Institution Université Joseph Fourrier Tel + 33 4 38 78 62 25 E.mail [email protected] URL http://inac.cea.fr/Pisp/vincent.ren… Participant category General Participant Session field Chemistry Session title Chemistry of "Origins of Life" Research Field Silicon, nanowire growth, electron electron interactions, graphene Statement of your research interests I study superconductivity induced in graphene by proximity effect. The aim is to use the outstanding properties of this new material to observed "de Gennes / St James states". Those states have been predicted in the 60’s and yet no direct observation has been made. I am also interested in valleytronics in Silicon (analogous to spintronics with the valley degree of freedom). In our devices valley splitting can be tuned electronically up to tens of MeV. Recent most important publications 1. Metallic behaviour in SOI quantum wells with strong intervalley scattering V. T. Renard , I. Duchemin, Y. Niida, A. Fujiwara, Y. Hirayama, K. Takashina. Scientific Reports 3, 2011 (2013) 2. Few-layer Graphene/Carbon Nanotube Epitaxial-Interface Grown at CMOS-compatible Temperature. V. Jousseaume, J. Cuzzocrea, N. Bernier, V. T. Renard Appl. phys. lett. 98, 123103 (2011) 3. Impact of Valley Polarization on the Resistivity in Two Dimensions. K. Takashina, Y. Niida, V. T. Renard , A. Fujiwara, T. Fujisawa, K. Muraki, and Y. Hirayama Phys. Rev. lett. 106, 196403 (2011) 4. Catalyst preparation for CMOS-compatible silicon nanowire synthesis. V. T. Renard, M. Jublot, P. Gergaud, P. Cherns, D. Rouchon, A. Chabli, V. Jousseaume Nature Nanotechnology, 4, 654 (2009) 5. Boundary mediated electron-electron interaction in quantum point contacts. V. T. Renard, O. A. Tkachenko, V. Tkachenko, T. Ota, N. Kumada, J-C. Portal, Y. Hirayama Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 186801 (2008) Poster Title De Gennes/St James States in graphene billards Poster Abstract We will introduce the physics of superconductivity induced in graphene by proximity effect. The aim is to use the outstanding properties of this new material to observed "de Gennes / St James states". Those states have been predicted in the 60’s and yet no direct observation has been made. 140 First Name Halima Last Name SAHRAOUI Position held Researcher Laboratory EA 4156 - URI OCTOGONE - J. LORDAT Address Maison de la Recherche - Pavillon R22 5, Allées Antonio Machado 31058 Toulouse Cedex 9 France Institution Université de Toulouse II-Le Mirail Tel + 33 6 22 67 36 93 E.mail [email protected] URL http://octogone.univ-tlse2.fr/accue… Participant category General Participant Session field Social Sciences/Humanities Session title Happiness Research Field Neurolinguistics, brain, language, communication, cognition Statement of your research interests My research interest focuses on the underlying cognitive processes involved in language and communication. My investigation methods are various and cover normal and impaired language, in monolingualism and second language learning / acquisition (data-driven analysis with language corporas, neuropsycholinguistic experiments, fMRI, EEG, rTMS). My research contributes to a better understanding of language impairment, rehabilitation and acquisition processes, related to neurocognitive flexibility in various situations (normal speakers, patients suffering from aphasia, second language learners). Recent most important publications 1. Sahraoui, H. & Nespoulous, J‐L. (2013). Perspective neuropsycholinguistique sur l’aphasie agrammatique. L’Information Grammaticale, 138. 2. Sahraoui, H. & Nespoulous, J‐L. (2012). Across‐task variability in agrammatic performance. Aphasiology, 26(6), 785‐810 [dx.doi.org/10.1080/02687038.2011.650625]. 3. Sahraoui, H. & Ho-Dac, L.-M. (2012). AphasiaBank: une base de données translinguistique de corpus aphasiques. Colloque International NeuroPsychoLinguistic Perspectives on Aphasia, Toulouse, 21-23 juin 2012. 4. Soroli, E., Sahraoui, H. & Sacchett, C. (2012). Linguistic encoding of motion events in English and French: Typological constraints on second language acquisition and agrammatic aphasia. Language, Interaction and Acquisition 3(2), 261-328. 5. Sahraoui, H. & Nespoulous, J.-L. (2010). A corpus-based study of agrammatic aphasia: New evidence for the potential prominent part played by adaptive strategies in these patients’ oral production [Abstract]. Elsevier Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences, AoA2010, 48th Academy of Aphasia Proceedings, 6, 115-116 [dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sbspro.2010.08.058]. 141 Poster title Neurocognitive flexibility in language and brain Poster abstract Interdisciplinary perspective is required to study the interplay between brain structures and language function, by bridging the fields of neurolinguistics and language/communication sciences. To understand better the neurobiological mechanisms involved to process language (speaking and hearing), one way is to study impaired language following brain dysfunction (e. g. patients suffering from brain damage affecting Broca’s area). The impact of neurological disorder on language skills may be carefully described by examining disrupted, preserved and recovered abilities. Another way is to look at the development of new language skills that could affect brain structures dedicated to language. In this line, a comparative study including contrasted languages, such as French and Japanese, may be relevant to check whether acquiring a « very different » foreign language makes some structural or activity changes in the adult brain, then resulting from intensive language learning and practice. Such methods reveal neurolinguistic flexibility assumed by brain structures and language skills, by investigating (1) how do altered neurocognitive structures and processing (e. g. due to a lesion) affect language use? and (2) how does language learning (e. g. a new language) affect neurocognitive structures and processing? 142 First Name Mayuko Last Name Sano Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory International Research Center for Japanese Studies Address of the laboratory 3-2 Oeyama-cho, Goryo, Nishikyo-ku, Kyoto 610-1192 Japan Institution International Research Center for Japanese Studies Tel + 81 75 335 2100 Fax + 81 75 335 2090 E.mail [email protected] URL http://research.nichibun.ac.jp/en/r… Participant category PGM Session field Social Sciences / Humanities Session title Happiness Research Field History of Diplomacy and Cultural Exchange, Cultural Policy Statement of your research interests I study History of Diplomacy, not necessarily from political perspectives but focusing on human contacts on the spot (therefore I call it Cultural History of Diplomacy). My target period as historian is the mid-nineteenth century, when Western diplomats started to arrive in Japan, and my current most important research topic is the development of diplomatic protocols at that time. I am also interested in today’s cultural diplomacy and broader cultural policies including cultural heritage management. Recent most important publications 1. "Toward Sustainable Diplomacy: Western Diplomat Audiences with the Shogun in the Bakumatsu Period", NIHON-KENKYU, No. 48 (2013), pp.101-27. 2. "La politique culturelle du Japon”, (Poirrier, Philippe, Ed.) Pour une histoire des politiques culturelles dans le monde : 1945-2011, Comité d’histoire du ministère de la culture, Paris, 2011, pp.347-69. 3. "Bunka wa dare no mono ni sareyoto shiteirunoka: Bunka seisaku no kenchi kara (By whom culture is being made owned : From a perspective of cultural policy)”, (Yamada, Shoji Ed.) Komonzu to bunka (Commons and culture), Tokyodo shuppan, Tokyo, 2010, pp.292-332. 4. "Tsutsui Masanori and Tokugawa Diplomacy : the Matter of the American Consul General’s Visit to Edo)”, Nihon-kenkyu, No. 39 (2009), pp.29-64. 5. Alcock no Edo : Shodai Eikoku koshi ga mita Bakumatsu-Nihon (Alcock’s Yedo : Japan of the last days of the ancien regime seen by the first British Minister), Chuokoron-shinsha., Tokyo, 2003. 143 First Name Alexandre Last Name SCHUBNEL Position held Researcher Laboratory Laboratoire de Géologie, CNRS/ENS Paris, UMR8538 Address 24 rue Lhomond 75005 Paris Institution CNRS Tel +33 1 44 32 22 12 Fax + 33 1 44 32 22 00 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.geologie.ens.fr/spiplabo Participant category Speaker Session field Earth Science / Environment Session title Earthquakes and Associated Risks Research field Geophysics, Fracture mechanics, Earthquakes, Poromechanics Statement of your research interests Major research interests are Rock Physics and Rock Mechanics. Most recent work has been focused on the understanding of earthquake source processes by studying experimentally dynamic fracture propagation and couplings between mineral transformations and mechanical instabilities. BA, Geophysics, 1998 Ecole Normale Supérieure de Paris. MS, Geophysics, 1999 Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris PhD., Geophysics, 2002 Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris Associate researcher at CNRS since 2006. Recent most important publications 1. Deep focus earthquake analogs recorded at high pressure and temperature in the laboratory, A. Schubnel, F. Brunet, N. Hilairet, J. Gasc, Y. Wang and Harry W. Green II, Science, 341, 1377-1380, 2013. 2. From Sub-Rayleigh to Supershear ruptures during stick-slip experiments on crustal rocks, F.X. Passelègue, A. Schubnel, S.B. Nielsen, H.S. Bhat and R. Madariaga, Science, 340, 1208-12011, 2013. 3. Photo-acoustic study of subshear and supershear ruptures in the laboratory, A. Schubnel ; S. B. Nielsen ; J. Tadeucci ; S. Vinciguerra and S. Rao, Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 2011. 4. Fast slip with inhibited temperature rise due to mineral dehydration : evidence from experiments on gypsum, N. Brantut, R. Han, N. Findling, T. Shimamoto, A. Schubnel, Geology, 2011 5. High-velocity frictional properties of a clay-bearing fault gouge and implications for earthquake mechanics, Brantut N, Schubnel A, Rouzaud JN, Brunet F and T.Shimamoto, Journal of Geophysical Research,113, B10401, 2008. 144 First Name Hidetoshi Last Name Shimodaira Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Division of Mathematical Science Address Hidetoshi Shimodaira, Prof. Division of Mathematical Science (J608) Graduate School of Engineering Science Osaka University 1-3 Machikaneyama-cho Toyonaka Osaka 560-8531 Japan Institution Osaka University Tel + 81 6 6850 6480 E.mail [email protected] Participant category PGM Session field Mathematics / Informatics Session title Bayesian Statistics Research Field Statistics Statement of your research interests Statistical methods for calculating confidence value of computation from data, which have been used for estimating the evolution from DNA sequence data. Particularly, working on a simulation method, called bootstrap resampling, to measure the randomness in data. A contribution of my resent work, called multiscale bootstrap, is to clarify a theory of the scaling-law of probabilities, and to calculate a very accurate confidence level by changing the data size to a negative value. Recent most important publications 1. P. Sheridan, Y. Yagahara, H. Shimodaira, Measuring preferential attachment in growing networks with missing-timelines using Markov chain Monte Carlo, Physica A : Statistical Mechanics and its Applications, 391, 5031-5040, 2012. 2. H. Shimodaira, Testing regions with nonsmooth boundaries via multiscale bootstrap, Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference, 138, 1227-1241, 2008. 3. H. Shimodaira, Approximately unbiased tests of regions using multistep-multiscale bootstrap resampling, Annals of Statistics, 32, 2616-2641, 2004. 4. H. Shimodaira, An approximately unbiased test of phylogenetic tree selection, Systematic Biology, 51, 492508, 2002. 5. H. Shimodaira and M. Hasegawa, Multiple comparisons of log-likelihoods with applications to phylogenetic inference, Molecular Biology and Evolution, 16, 1114-1116, 1999. 145 First Name Masashi Last Name Shiraishi Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Kyoto University Address Kyoto-Daigaku-Katsura, Nishikyo-ku, Kyoto 6158530, Japan Institution University Tel + 81 75 383 2272 Fax + 81 75 383 2272 E.mail [email protected] URL http://cmp.kuee.kyoto-u.ac.jp/ Participant category Speaker Session field Materials Science Session title Graphene, the miracle material Research field Condensed Matter Physics, Spintronics, Graphene Material Science, Topological Insulators Statement of your research interests Spintronics (Physical Properties of Pure Spin Current, Spincurrentronics, Semiconductor Spintronics), Graphene Material Science, Topological Insulators Recent most important publications 1. E. Shikoh, T. Shinjo, K. Ando, E. Saito and M. Shiraishi, “Spin-pumping-induced spin transport in p-type Si at room temperature”, Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, 127201 (2013) [Editor’s Suggestion & Spotlighting Exceptional Research]. 2. Z. Tang, H. Ago, E. Shikoh, Y. Ando, T. Shinjo and M. Shiraishi, “Dynamically-generated pure spin current in graphene”, Phys. Rev. B87, 140401® (2013) [Editor’s Suggestion]. 3. Y. Aoki, M. Kameno, E. Shikoh, Y. Ando, T. Shinjo, T. Sasaki, T. Oikawa, T. Suzuki and M. Shiraishi, “Investigation of Inverted Hanle effect in highly-doped Si”, Phys. Rev. B86, 081201® (2012). 4. Y. Sakai, E. Tamura, S. Toyokawa, E. Shikoh, T. Shinjo, V.K. Lazarov, A. Hirohata, Y. Suzuki and M. Shiraishi, “A novel magnetic switching effect in a C60-Co nanocomposites system”, Adv. Func. Mat. 22, 3845 (2012). 5. M. Shiraishi, Y. Honda, E. Shikoh, Y. Suzuki, T. Shinjo, T. Sasaki, T. Oikawa, K. Noguchi and T. Suzuki, “Spin transport properties in Si in a non-local geometry”, Phys. Rev. B83, 241204®, (2011). 146 First Name Daisuke Last Name Takahashi Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Ashikaga Institute of Technology Address Ohmae-cho 268-1, Ashikaga, Tochigi 326-8558, Japan Institution University Tel + 81 284 22 5627 Fax + 81 284 62 7148 E.mail [email protected] Participant category Speaker Session field Physics and Astrophysics Session title Supersolidity and quantum plasticity Research Field Condensed Matter Physics, Low Temperature Physics Statement of your research interests Quantum liquid and solid, Quantum magnetism and Quantum phase transition Recent most important publications Evidence of Supersolidity in Rotating Solid Helium, Science, 330, 1512-1516 (2010) Stairlike Suppression of Supersolidity under Rotation, Physical Review Letters, 108, 105302-105305 (2011) Shear resonance and torsional oscillator measurements of solid 4He under DC rotation, Physical Review B, 86, 174505-174508 (2012) 147 First Name Hidehiko Last Name TakahashI Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Department of Psychiatry Address 54 Shogoin-Kawara-cho Sakyo-ku Kyoto 606-8507 Japan Institution Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine Tel + 81 75 751 3386 Fax + 81 75 751 3246 E.mail [email protected] URL Participant category Speaker Session field Life / Medical Science Session title Psychiatric disorders: definitions and treatments Research Field Psychiatry, neuroscience, neuroimaging, pharmacology, decision-making Statement of your research interests As a clinical psychiatrist, I am interested in altered decision-making in neuropsychiatric disorders. For the understanding the neural basis of decision-making, I am conducting multidisciplinal projects (MRI, positron emission tomography, computational neuroscience, pharmacology, economics, psychology etc). Taken advantage of these approaches, I would like to establish computational psychiatry for more scientific diagnosis and novel therapy. Recent most important publications Takahashi H, Fujie S, Camerer C, Arakawa R, Takano H, Kodaka F, Matsui H, Ideno T, Okubo S, Takemura K, Yamada M, Eguchi Y, Murai T, Okubo Y, Kato M, Ito H, Suhara T. Norepinephrine in the brain is associated with aversion to financial loss. Mol Psychiatry (2013) 18 : 3-4 Takahashi H, Takano H, Camerer C, Ideno T, Okubo S, Matsui H, Tamari Y, Takemura K, Arakawa R, Yamada M, Eguchi Y, Murai T, Okubo Y, Kato M, Ito H, Suhara T. Honesty mediates the relationship between serotonin and reaction to unfairness. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2012) 109(11):4281-4284 Yamada M, Camerer CF, Kato M, Fujie S, Ito H, Suhara T, Takahashi H. Emotional justice : Neural circuits mitigating criminal sentences Nature Commun (2012) 3:759. Takahashi H, Matsui H, Camerer CF, Takano H, Kodaka F, Ideno T, S Okubo S, Takemura K, Arakawa R, Eguchi Y, Murai T, Okubo Y, Kato M, Ito H, Suhara T. Dopamine D1 receptors and nonlinear probability weighting in risky choice. J Neurosci (2010) 30(49):16567-16572. Takahashi H, Kato M, Matsuura M, Mobbs D, Suhara T, Okubo Y : When Your Gain is my Pain and Your Pain is my Gain : Neural Correlates of Envy and Schadenfreude. Science (2009) 323 : 937-939 148 First Name Yoshihiko Last Name Togawa Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Togawa Laboratory Address Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Research Center Osaka Prefecture University 1-2, Gakuenchou, Naka-ku, Sakai, Osaka 599-8570 JAPAN Institution University Tel + 81 72 254 8216 Fax + 81 72 254 8216 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.nanosq.21c.osakafu-u.ac…. Participant category General Participant Session field Materials Science Session title Graphene, the "miracle material" Research Field Condensed-matter Physics, Solid State Physics, Electron Physics, Superconductivity, Spin Electronics Statement of your research interests My main research field is Condensed-Matter Physics and Solid State Physics. Recently, I am focusing on Electron Physics, Superconductivity, and Spin Electronics. Particularly, I have strong interest in magnetic materials with chirality. Using chiral magnetic materials, I am trying to exploit a novel research field named spin phase electronics. Recent most important publications 1. Y. Togawa et al., “Interlayer magnetoresistance due to chiral soliton lattice formation in hexagonal chiral magnet CrNb3S6” Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 197204-1-5 (2013). 2. Y. Togawa “Small-angle electron scattering of magnetic fine structures” Microscopy 62, S75-S86 (2013). 3. Y. Togawa et al., “Chiral magnetic soliton lattice on chiral helimagnet” Phys. Rev. Lett. 108, 107202-1-5 (2012). (Selected as Spotlighting Exceptional Research in American Physical Society. Highlighted in a Viewpoint in Physics 5, 28 (2012).) 4. K. Takayanagi, T. Koyama, S. Mori, K. Harada, Y. Togawa, “Small-angle electron scattering from magnetic artificial lattice” J. Electron Microscopy 61, 401-407 (2012). 5. T. Koyama, S. Yano, Y. Togawa, Y. Kousaka, S. Mori, K. Inoue, J. Kishine, J. Akimitsu “Unconventional magnetic domain structure in the ferromagnetic phase of MnP single crystals” Journal of the Physical Society of Japan Letters 81, 043701-1-4 (2012). 149 Poster Title Spin Phase Electronics Using Chiral Magnet Poster Abstract The concept of chirality, meaning left or right handedness, plays an essential role in sym- metry properties of nature at all length scales from elementary particles to biological systems. In materials science, chiral materials are found in molecules or crystals with helical structures, which break mirror and inversion symmetries but combine rotational and translational symmetries. Chiral materials frequently exhibit intriguing functionality because electrons distribute themselves along chiral framework of atomic configurations and their rotational and translational motions couple to give specific physical processes. In this poster, we directly present that chiral magnetic order called chiral soliton lattice (CSL) emerges in a magnetic crystal CrNb3S6, which belongs to chiral space group, by means of low-temperature Lorenz transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and small-angle electron scattering (SAES) method. We demonstrate that CSL is tunable, stable, robust, topological, and coherent spin phase state that appears in a macroscopic scale. These functionalities, unique to CSL protected by crystal chirality, will open up a route to a new paradigm for spin electronics applications using chiral magnetic crystals. 150 First Name Vincent Last Name TOURNAT Position held Researcher Laboratory Laboratoire d’Acoustique de l’Université du Maine UMR 6613 Address Université du Maine Av. O. Messiaen 72085 Le Mans Institution CNRS Tel + 33 6 43 19 97 14 Fax + 33 2 43 83 35 20 E.mail [email protected] URL http://perso.univ-lemans.fr/ vtournat/ Participant category General Participant Session field Materials Science Session title Graphene, the “miracle material” Research field Acoustics, nonlinear acoustics, granular media, laser ultrasonics, metamaterials Statement of your research interests I am interested in acoustic waves in complex media (granular media, nonlinear elastic media, multiple scattering media, acoustic metamaterials and phononic crystals, porous media). Frequencies and applications range from seismic frequencies in geophysics, audible sound in air and porous materials (for noise control, wave control by metamaterials), ultrasounds and up to hypersounds in laser ultrasonics (>GHz frequencies, non destructive testing of micro-structures). Recent most important publications 1. A. Merkel, J. Cabaret, V. Tournat, P. Béquin, Amplitude-dependent phononic processes in a diatomic granular chain in the weakly nonlinear regime, Phys. Rev. E 86, 041305 (2012). 2. V. Tournat, V. Gusev, Experimental evidence of rotational elastic waves in granular phononic crystals, Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 225502 (2011). 4. V. Tournat, I. Pèrez-Arjona, A. Merkel, V. Sanchez-Morcillo, V. Gusev, Elastic waves in phononic monolayer granular membranes, New Journal of Physics 13, 073042 (2011). 4. V. Tournat and V.E. Gusev, Acoustics of unconsolidated granular media: an overview of recent results and several open problems, Acta-Acustica United with Acustica 96, 208-224 (2010). 5. X. Jacob, V. Aleshin, V. Tournat, P. Leclaire, W. Lauriks, and V.E. Gusev, Acoustic probing of the jamming transition in an unconsolidated granular medium, Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 158003 (2008). Poster title Elastic waves in granular crystals: micro-rotation and nonlinearities Poster abstract Elastic wave propagation is studied theoretically and experimentally in various periodic arrangements of mm- to cm-scale beads, denoted as granular crystals. The studied one-dimensional granular chains, 2D membranes and 3D arrangements show strong dispersion properties when the wavelength is comparable to the bead size (forbidden propagation bands, frequency dependent velocity …). We focus in particular on the processes related to the rotational degree of freedom of the beads and on the nonlinear elastic coupling at the contact between beads. We report for instance the existence and analyze pure rotational waves and coupled modes of propagation involving rotation of the beads in granular crystals. 151 First Name Taro Last Name Toyota Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory The University of Tokyo, Komaba Address 3-8-1 Komaba. Meguro, Tokyo 153-8902, JAPAN Institution University Tel + 81 3 5465 7634 Fax + 81 3 5465 7634 E.mail [email protected] URL http://park.itc.u-tokyo.ac.jp/toyot… Participant category Speaker Session field Chemistry Session title Chemistry of "Origins of Life Research Field Lipid, Self-Assembly, Vesicle, Emulsion Statement of your research interests Out-of-equilibrium chemistry of molecular assembly Recent most important publications 1. T. Banno, S. Miura, R. Kuroha, T. Toyota, “Mode Changes Associated with Oil Droplet Movement in Solutions of Gemini Cationic Surfactants”, Langmuir 29, 7689-7696 (2013). 2. K. Kurihara, M. Tamura, K. -i. Shohda, T. Toyota, K. Suzuki, T. Sugawara, “Self-Reproduction of Supramolecular Giant Vesicles Combined with the Amplification of Encapsulated DNA” , Nat. Chem. 3, 775-781 (2011). 3. M. Masubuchi, T. Toyota, M. Yamada, M. Seki, “Fluidic Shear-Assisted Formation of Actuating Multilamellar Lipid Tubes Using Microfabricated Nozzle Array Device”, Chem. Commun. 47, 8433-8435 (2011). 4. T. Toyota, N. Maru, M. M. Hanczyc, T. Ikegami, T. Sugawara, “Self-Propelled Oil Droplet Consuming “Fuel” Surfactant”, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 131, 5012-5013 (2009). 152 First Name Yann Last Name TROLEZ Position held Researcher Laboratory Institut des Sciences Chimiques de Rennes Address 11 allée de Beaulieu CS 50837 35708 Rennes Cedex 7 France Institution Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Chimie de Rennes Tel + 33 2 23 23 80 69 Fax + 33 2 23 23 81 08 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.ensc-rennes.fr/themes/re… Participant category General Participant Session field Chemistry Session title Chemistry and biochemistry Research Field Organic chemistry - Astrobiology - Interstellar chemistry Statement of your research interests My research interests include the organic chemistry out of the Earth, from the interstellar medium to Titan, the moon of Saturn. So in our group, we develop new chemical reactions to access unstable compounds that are or could be present in space. We also study their reactivity once they are synthesized and try to detect them in the interstellar medium or Titan in collaboration with astronomers. Recent most important publications 1. Y. Trolez, J.-C. Guillemin, "Synthesis and Characterization of 2,4-Pentadiynenitrile—A Key Compound in Space Science", Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2005, 44, 7224-7226 2. J.-P. Collin, F. Durola, J. Frey, V. Heitz, F. Reviriego, J.-P. Sauvage, Y. Trolez, K. Rissanen, "Templated synthesis of cyclic [4]rotaxanes consisting of two stiff rods threaded through two bis-macrocycles with a large and rigid central plate as spacer", J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2010, 132, 6840-6850 3. J.-P. Collin, S. Durot, M. Keller, J.-P. Sauvage, Y. Trolez, M. Cetina and K. Rissanen, "Synthesis of [5]Rotaxanes Containing Bi- and Tridentate Coordination Sites in the Axis", Chem. Eur. J. 2011, 17, 947-957 4. A. Joosten, Y. Trolez, J.-P. Collin, V. Heitz, J.-P. Sauvage, "A copper (I)-assembled [3]rotaxane whose two rings act as flapping wings", J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2012, 134, 1802-1809 5. N. Kerisit, L. Toupet, Y. Trolez, J.-C. Guillemin, "Methylcyanobutadiyne : synthesis, X-ray structure and photochemistry. Towards an explanation of its formation in the interstellar medium", Chem. Eur. J. 2013, DOI : 10.1002/chem.201303377 153 Poster Title Synthesis and study of cyanobutadiyne and methylcyanobutadiyne: two interstellar compounds Poster Abstract Some cyanopolyynes (H-(C≡C)n-CN) and methylcyanopolyynes (CH3-(C≡C)n-CN) have been detected in the interstellar medium (ISM) as well as on Titan for some of them. They could have played a role during the development of the prebiotic chemistry on Primitive Earth, according to some studies on cyanoacetylene, the first member of these families (n=1). However, except this latter, their synthesis in the laboratory is not easy, and most of them have never been synthesized so far. An efficient and easy synthetic pathway would allow to study them and to understand their implication in prebiotic chemistry. Few years ago, we synthesized the cyanobutadiyne (H-C≡C-C≡C-CN) and could thus study its formation pathway in the ISM by photolysis of binary mixtures of acetylenic compounds. More recently, we have been interested by its methylated conterpart, the methylcyanobutadiyne (CH3-C≡C-C≡C-CN), which has been scarcely studied. We proposed an original synthesis and tried to understand its formation in the ISM. We could show that a mixture of gases under UV radiations could lead to its formation in this medium. 154 First Name Shoko Last Name Utsunomiya Position held Researcher Laboratory National Institute of Informatics Address National Institute of Informatics 2-1-2 Hitotsubashi, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 101-8430 Institution Research Organization of Information and Systems (ROIS) / National laboratory Tel + 81-3-4212-2559 Fax + 81-3-4212-2641 E.mail [email protected] URL http://www.nii.ac.jp/en/faculty/inf Participant category General Participant Session field Physics and Astrophysics Session title Supersolidity and quantum plasticity Research field Quantum information science, Quantum computing, Quantum optics, Semiconductor lasers, Neural network Statement of your research interests XOur recent research deals with theoretical and experimental aspects of alternative computing using open dissipative nonlinear optics. We proposed a new computing scheme named as a “coherent computer” using the laser network for solving NP-hard Ising models efficiently. Ising models are mapped onto Iaser networks, up or down M Ising spins are represented by the eigenstates of oscillators and Ising terms are mapped onto the mutual coupling between each oscillators, to find its ground state from 2^M eigenstates. Recent most important publications 1. S. Utsunomiya, K. Takata, and Y. Yamamoto, "Mapping of Ising models onto injection-locked laser systems", Opt. Express 19, 18091-18108 (September 2011) 2. S. Utsunomiya, L.Tian, G. Roumpos, C. W. Lai, N. Kumada, T. Fujisawa, M. Kuwata-Gonokami, A. Loeffler, S. Hoefling, A. Forchel and Y. Yamamoto, “Observation of Bogoliubov excitations in exciton-polariton condensates,” Nature Physics 4, 700 - 705 (August 2008) 3. C. W. Lai, N. Y. Kim, S. Utsunomiya, G. Roumpos, H. Deng, M. D. Fraser, T. Byrnes, P. Recher, N. Kumada, T. Fujisawa and Y. Yamamoto, “Coherent zero-state and p-state” in an exciton-polariton condensation array”, Nature 450, 529-532 (Nov 2007) 4. N. Na, S. Utsunomiya, L. Tian and Y. Yamamoto, “Strongly correlated polaritons in a two-dimensional array of photonic crystal microcavities” Phys. Rev. A, 77 031803® (April 2008) 5. S. Utsunomiya, C. P. Master, and Y. Yamamoto, "Algorithm-based analysis of collective decoherence in quantum computation," J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 24, 198-208 (Feb 2007) selected for the February 2007 issue of Virtual Journal of Quantum Information. 155 Poster title Coherent Ising machine using a laser network Poster abstract Optimization problems are well known computationally hard problems in our modern life such as weather forecast, protein holding problems, stock price prediction, travelling salesman problems, and so on. Even supercomputer cannot solve those problems exactly because the required computational time scales exponentially as the growth of their problem size. Those optimization problems are classified into as NP-complete/hard problems. The quantum computing is one of the possibilities to solve those computationally hard problems efficiently. Recently new type of quantum computing called as quantum annealing has gotten a lot of attention recently We recently proposed a coherent Ising machine to solve NP-hard 3D Ising models efficiently using laser network which can be implemented by semiconductor lasers, optical parametric oscillators or fiber mode locked lasers. The algorithm of coherent computer is quite new and different from existing quantum computing or quantum annealing, based on the minimum gain principle of a laser network. The numerical results we performed so far reasonably suggest the effective computational power of the proposed a coherent Ising machine. We also show our recent experimental result of four -site Ising model implementation. 156 First Name Nicolas Family Name VUILLERME Position held Researcher Laboratory AGIM FRE 3405 CNRS UJF UPMF EPHE Address Univ. Grenoble Alpes, AGIM laboratory, FRE 3405, CNRS-UJFUPMF-EPHE _ Faculté de Médecine 38706 La Tronche cédex France Institution Joseph Fourier University of Grenoble Tel + 33 4 76 63 71 04 E.mail [email protected] URL http://nicolas.vuillerme.perso.sfr Participant category General Participant Session field Life / Medical Science Session title Psychiatric disorders: definitions and treatments Research Field E-health; Sensory substitution; Technologies and Services for Ageing, Health, Autonomy; Ambient Assisted Living Statement of your research interests I am currently developing and encouraging interdisciplinary and translational Education, Research and Innovation activities focused on health, autonomy, quality of life and well-being of the elderly, dependent older people, disabled people and those with progressive or chronic diseases, which are currently important social issues. These activities are expressed in three complementary forms: (1) fundamental research in the fields of Neuroscience, Psychology and Biomechanics. The aim is to investigate the interactions between sensorymotor and cognitive mechanisms involved in the control of human perceptive, spatial, postural and motor behaviours and their changes as a results of normal aging, chronic diseases, pathologies and/or accidents; (2) applied research dedicated to Technologies and Services for Ageing, Health, Autonomy, Ambient Assisted Living and Home Care in the fields of Information Technology Engineering Sciences, Human Factors, Ergonomics and Domotics. The aim is to conceive, develop, validate and deploy physical and physiological multimodal, embedded and interactive sensors and actuators – designed for assessment of sensory, motor and cognitive capacities, continuous monitoring activity, ambulatory medical care, perceptual supplementation, cognitive and functional assistance in activities of daily living and occupational activities - and to integrate these devices in a multimodal home automation environment. Recent most important publications 1. Chenu, O., Vuillerme, N., Bucki, M., Diot, B., Cannard, F., & Payan, Y., TexiCare : An innovative embedded device for pressure ulcer prevention. Preliminary results with a paraplegic volunteer. Journal of Tissue Viability, 22 (2013) 83-90. 2. Pradels, A., Pradon, D., Hlavacková, P., Diot, B., & Vuillerme, N., Sensory re-weighting in human bipedal postural control : the effects of experimentally-induced plantar pain. PLoS ONE (2013) 8(6) : e65510. doi:10.1371/ journal.pone.0065510. 3. Franco, C., Fleury, A., Guméry, P.Y., Diot, B., Demongeot, J., & Vuillerme, N., iBalance-ABF: a Smartphonebased audio-biofeedback balance system. IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 60 (2013) 211-215. 4. Fouquet, Y., Franco, C., Diot, B., Demongeot, J., & Vuillerme, N., Estimation of task persistence parameter from pervasive medical systems with censored data. IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing, 12 (2013) 633-646. 5. Verrel, J., Pradon, D., & Vuillerme, N., Persistence of motor-equivalent postural fluctuations during bipedal quiet standing. PLoS ONE (2012) 7(10): e48312. 157 Poster Title Wearing the Texisense smart socks to prevent diabetic foot ulceration? Yes, we can! Poster Abstract Although most existing insole plantar pressure monitoring systems are promising in their ability to measure in real time the pressures at the foot/insole interface, they do suffer from several limitations. Sensor technology is included in the insole that prevents any overpressure detection in the dorsal surfaces of the toes and the feet, they still need a wire connection that makes them inappropriate to a daily use and they are prohibitively expensive for widespread consumer and clinical use. A promising approach to partly overcome these disadvantages could be the development of textile technologies. We designed a fully wireless, customizable and washable sock made of a textile able to measure pressures all around the foot and the ankle. Preliminary studies showed that Texisense smart socks are a functional device that meets requirements in terms of valid and reliable real time, long-term and in-situ foot pressure monitoring and in terms of comfort, portability, ease of use and aesthetics for a daily use. Clinical studies are currently performed to assess the effectiveness of the Texisense smart socks in educating and alerting patients and helping the podiatrists and the footwear industry to improve insole and/or shoe design in order to prevent foot ulcers and lower extremity amputations in people with diabetes. 158 First Name Katsuyuki Last Name Yamashita Position held Researcher Laboratory Graduate School of Natural Science and Technology of the laboratory Address Okayama University 3-1-1 Tsushima-naka, Kita-ku, Okayama 700-8530 JAPAN Institution Okayama University Tel + 81 86 251 7878 Fax +81 86 251 7878 E.mail [email protected] Participant category PGM Session field Earth Science / Environment Session title Earthquakes and Associated Risks Research field Geochemistry Statement of your research interests Is in the field of geochemistry and cosmochemistry. Through high-precision isotopic analyses of meteorites, processes responsible for the evolution of the early solar system are being unraveled. Over the past several years I have successfully developed a technique for ultra-high precision isotopic analysis of chromium in meteorites. This technique has led us to precisely determine the age of meteorites that were difficult to determine using other chronometers. Recent most important publications 1. Tectonic influence on chemical composition of ocean island basalts in the West and South Pacific: Implication for a deep mantle origin, Shimoda, G, Ishizuka, O., Yamashita, K., Yoshitake, M., Ogasawara, M., Yuasa, M., G-Cubed, 12, Q07020, 23. (2011) 2. 53Mn-53Cr chronometry of CB chondrite: evidence for uniform distribution of 53Mn in the early solar system, Yamashita, K., Maruyama, S, Yamakawa, A. and Nakamura, E., Astrophysical Journal, 723 20-24. (2010) 3. Chromium isotope systematics of achondrites: chronology and isotopic heterogeneity of the inner solar system bodies, Yamakawa, A., Yamashita, K., Makishima, A. and Nakamura, E., Astrophysical Journal, 720 150-154. (2010) 4. Precise determination of Cr, Mn, Fe, Co and Ni concentration by an isotope dilution-internal standardization method employing high resolution MC-ICP-MS, Makishima, A., Yamakawa, A., Yamashita, K. and Nakamura, E., Chemical Geology, 274, 82-86. (2010) • Chemical separation and mass spectrometry of Cr, Fe, Ni, Zn and Cu in terrestrial and extraterrestrial materials using Thermal Ionization Mass Spectrometry, Yamakawa, A., Yamashita, K., Makishima, A. and Nakamura, E., Analytical Chemistry, 81, 9787-9794. (2009) 159 Poster title Geochemical evidence for 215 Ma extraterrestrial impact event on Earth Poster abstract The period between the Upper Triassic and the Lower Jurassic (approximately 230-200 million years ago) is characterized by the formation of several large impact craters including the 100 km Manicouagan structure in Canada. It is well known that extraterrestrial impact that can create crater of this size can drastically change the Earth’s surficial environment, sometimes leading to mass extinction event. Thus, a detailed understanding of the size as well as the chemical composition of the projectiles is of particular importance. Chromium isotope, which has widely been used as a chronometer to determine the ages of the early solar system objects, can be used as a powerful tool to reveal the geochemical nature of the extraterrestrial materials that accreted to the Earth because meteorites of different classes are characterized by distinct 54Cr isotopic signature. In this presentation, I will show the results of high-precision Cr isotopic analyses of the Upper Triassic deep-sea sediments with anomalously high concentration of platinum group elements which strongly suggest that extraterrestrial object of few km in size accreted to the Earth at 215 Ma (Onoue et al. 2012). References : Onoue T. et al. 2012. PNAS, 109:19134-19139. 160 First Name Ryo Last Name Yoshida Position held Senior Researcher Laboratory Department of Statistical Modeling, The Institute of Statistical Mathematics, Research Organization of Information and Systems Address 10-3 Midori-cho, Tachikawa, Tokyo 190-8562, Japan Institution Research Institute Tel + 81 50 5533 8534 Fax + 81 42 526 4335 E.mail [email protected] URL http://daweb.ism.ac.jp/yoshidalab/i… Participant category General Participant Session field Mathematics / Informatics Session title Bayesian Statistics Research Field Bayesian statistics, Chemical Informatics, Systems Biology, Bioimage Informatics, Data Assimilation Statement of your research interests Bayesian statistics and its applications to Bioinformatics, Chemical Informatics, and Computational Systems Biology Recent most important publications 1. Y.Tamada, R.Yamaguchi, S.Imoto, O.Hirose, R.Yoshida, M.Nagasaki, S.Miyano (2011) SiGN-SSM : open source parallel software for estimating gene networks with state space models, Bioinformatics, 27(8), 11721173. 2. R.Yoshida, M.Saito, H.Nagao, T.Higuchi (2010) Bayesian experts in exploring reaction kinetics of transcription circuits, Bioinformatics, 26(18), i589-595. 3. R.Yoshida, M.West (2010) Bayesian learning in sparse graphical factor models via variational mean-field annealing, Journal of Machine Learning Research, 11:1771-1798. 4. R.Yoshida, M.Nagasaki, R.Yamaguchi, S.Imoto, S.Miyano, T.Higuchi (2008) Bayesian learning of biological pathways on genomic data assimilation, Bioinformatics, 24(22):2592-2601. 5. O.Hirose, R.Yoshida, S.Imoto, R.Yamaguchi, T.Higuchi, D.Stephen Charnock-Jones, C.Print, S.Miyano (2008) Statistical inference of transcriptional module-based gene networks from time course gene expression profiles by using state space models, Bioinformatics, 24(7):932-42. Poster Title Bayesian statistics for bioscience Poster Abstract We apply the powerful tools of Bayesian statistics and machine learning as a driving force to address a wide variety of problems in the biosciences. In this poster, we present three of the primary focus areas of our research on chemical informatics, neuroscience, and DNA sequence analysis. 161 ANNEXes 163 The city of Metz 3,000 years of history have created a strong character and Metz’s heritage is remarkably well preserved in its verdant background on the confluence of the rivers Moselle and Seille. Full of original heritage, classed as a laboratory for architects, Metz seduces by the diversity of its natural, cultural & architectural riches. Capital city of Moselle-Lorraine, bordered by Germany, Belgium & Luxembourg. Saint-Etienne cathedral With its 42 m high vaults, it is one of the highest gothic edifices in Europe. With its 6,500 m² of stained glass windows, the nickname “God’s lantern” is well merited. There are windows from the 13th to the 20th century by Hermann de Müsnter, Theobald de Lixheim, Valentin Bousch, Jacques Villon and Marc Chagall. DISC OVER METZ Cour d’Or museum Gallo-Roman and medieval collections: ancient thermal baths, Merten’s column, chancel of St-Pierre-aux-Nonnains, medieval painted ceilings … Imperial Quarter Developed from 1902 and surrounding the central station (300 m long), the Imperial Quarter is a remarkable ensemble of German town planning at the beginning of the 20th century. An exceptional district in its conception and quality, it is currently being considered for addition to the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Pompidou Metz Center Designed as a unique experience, this international Modern Art Center is a space where you can discover artistic creation in all its shapes and sizes, a living place where events take place all year round, in its impressive building designed by Shigeru Ban and Jean de Gastines. 164 Access to symposium venue: MERCURE HOTEL Cour d’Or museum St-Etienne cathedral Arsenal Japanese TORI TGV railway station Pompidou Modern Art Center Seille Park Ideally located in the business district of Metz, a city renowned for its lights, the MERCURE Metz-Centre 4-star hotel is a short walk from the Pompidou Center, the Cour d’Or museum, St-Etienne cathedral and the Arsenal concert hall. Number of car spaces: 40 Private outdoor parking Bus / coach parking area 3’ walk from railway station 5’ drive from motorway exit Metz-Centre 20’ drive from Metz Nancy Lorraine regional airport 40’ drive from Luxembourg international airport 29 place Saint-Thiébault - 57000 METZ Tel: + 33 3-87-38-50-52 www.mercure.com 165 ようこそ、 モゼールへ ! Welcome to Moselle ! For several years now, the Moselle Department of France has developped strong links with Japan, in many forms (economic, cultural, orchards, urban symbols...). On the occasion of JFFOS 2014 symposium taking place in Metz, capital city of Moselle/Lorraine, on the initiative of Moselle Development Agency, representatives of the lorraine scientific community have been invited to attend the gala dinner organized by FOS consortium, as a unique opportunity to interact with the participants to this symposium. JFFOS h30 - 22h00) 9 (1 R E N N I D GAL A 24 january 2014 ARSENAL - Salle de l’Orangerie Maquette, numérisation et mise en page : Bernard Dupuis - Secteur de l'Imprimé du Siège Campus Gérard-Mégie - CNRS 166
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