Next summer (2011) we have some major academic plans on the table. We’re going to be offering summer short courses at the Fairfax Campus of George Mason. The topics are still in flux, but they will bring top-flight faculty from around the world to Mason’s brand new Hotel and Conference Center, the Mason Inn. Generally we’ll be teaching week long short courses in our areas of expertise: social complexity, neuroethics and policy, and possibly agent based modeling. The courses will leverage the newly expanded Institute Facility (by next summer we’ll be around 60,000 square feet) and the University’s close proximity to the Nation’s capital. Stay tuned!
New design and new location for Advanced Studies
Welcome to our new design. And the new address is www.jamesolds.com –we’re still on blogspot, but we’re using our own domain.
The Annual Science Retreat

This is one of my favorite times of year: our annual science retreat at the Institute for Advanced Study. This year, as with others, we get a fabulous overview of the depth and breadth of the research portfolio at Krasnow. Yesterday’s session featured back-to-back talks, today student poster sessions and a faculty luncheon.
In the foreground here Giorgio Ascoli is engaged in a deep discussion about networks with Claudio Cioffi. Behind them doctoral students and Ted Dumas focus in on a poster.
Allen Human Brain Atlas Launches
This is one of the crowning efforts in neuroinformatics. Read about it here (with links).
The Guardian’s Feature Piece on Venter
Can be found here. I’ll resist the temptation to editorialize.
Craig still makes news….
Genome Pioneer Craig Venter still knows how to make the news. Read about it here.
Olvia Judson’s NY Times Science Blog
I am a very avid supporter of Olivia Judson’s wonderful science blog over at the New York Times (click on the link above). Today she salutes archaea, the third domain of the tree of life. These microbes are both ubiquitous and in many senses unexplored territory as far as biology is concerned–they’re difficult to culture in the laboratory.
More diagnostic: archaeal cell membranes have a different structure and composition from those of bacteria or eukaryotes. And although archaea organize their DNA much as bacteria do (they also have no cell nucleus, for example), many aspects of the way the DNA gets processed are distinctly different. Instead, the processing is more similar to what goes in within eukaryotic cells. Archaea also have large numbers of genes that are not found in the other groups.
UVA and the Commonwealth’s Attorney General
The dispute between scientists in the Commonwealth and Commonwealth Attorney General Ken Cucininelli is heating up. Click on the link above to follow the story.
Commencement and new beginnings
Tomorrow morning is Commencement at George Mason University. As in so many previous years, I’ll arrive early at the Institute, don my academic regalia and walk across the campus lawns to the Patriot Center to join the platform party and mark the end of another academic year.
Change Comes Knocking
Looks like the NSF and NASA budgets are in for a period of unpredictability. Details here at ScienceInsider.