Past Events › Colloquia

HITS organizes scientific events throughout the year. Each month, HITS hosts its colloquium series. If you like to receive an invitation, please use this registration form: https://www.h-its.org/registration/

Our research groups offer scientific workshops. Additionally, HITS offers talks and events for the general public in Heidelberg and surroundings.

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International Symposium Computational Astrophysics

Studio Villa Bosch Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 33, Heidelberg, Germany

From 2-3 May 2019 the International Symposium Computational Astrophysics takes place in the Studio Villa Bosch Heidelberg. Registration: christina.blach@h-its.org Parking: „Unter der Boschwiese“ (free of charge)

Colloquium Rainer Malaka: Empowering People with Digital Media: Playful and Natural Human Computer Interaction

Studio Villa Bosch Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 33, Heidelberg, Germany

By Prof. Dr. Rainer Malaka, Technology Center Informatics and Information Technology (TZI), University of Bremen Digital Media are omnipresent and ubiquitous phenomena. The digital revolution has already transformed our lives and societies. This trend will continue and include more devices in our surrounding such as cars and household robots. In this new digital society, Human […]

Colloquium Peter Hunter: Computational Physiology and the Physiome Project

Studio Villa Bosch Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 33, Heidelberg, Germany

By Prof. Dr. Peter Hunter, Auckland Bioengineering Institute, University of Auckland, New Zealand Computational physiological models deal with multiple physical processes (coupled tissue mechanics, electrical activity, fluid flow, etc) at multiple spatial and temporal scales. In many cases the goal is to understand integrative biological function in terms of underlying tissue structure and molecular mechanisms. […]

Colloquium Richard A. Bonneau: Large Scale Machine Learning Methods for Predicting Protein Functions from integration of Sequence, Structure and Networks

Studio Villa Bosch Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 33, Heidelberg, Germany

By Prof. Dr. Richard A. Bonneau, Professor of Biology and Computer Science; Director, NYU Center for Data Science, New York, USA Vladimir Gligorijevic, P Douglas Renfrew and Richard Bonneau. Due to limitations of existing experimental methods for determining protein functions and the high cost of experiments, the vast majority of proteins across many organisms remain […]