IFISC People: Esteve Seguí
We are pleased to introduce
Esteve Seguí to the other IFISC
members.
Esteve has a degree in web development, having
done an internship at APSL. He is also a qualified microcomputer and network
technician, with an internship at BEL Informática, and holds certifications in
programming and computer security. He has carried out several programming projects
with different languages available in his
portfolio. At
IFISC he will work as web developer in charge of the maintenance and management
of the institute's multiple web services.
http://ifisc.uib-csic.es/en/news/ifisc-people-esteve-segui/
The shape of memory in temporal networks
An international team of researchers, with
participation of IFISC (UIB-CSIC), have proposed a mathematical framework to
estimate the memory structure of temporal networks. These findings are
published in the latest issue Nature Communications.Temporal Networks (those whose
structure changes over time) are a very useful tool for studying complex
systems. But the properties of a temporal network not only depend on the patterns
of activities of each of its links, but also on the ways in which these
activities influence each other across the network. This rich dynamic gives
rise to the notion of network memory, this is, the dependence of a temporal
network’s structure on its past.To this objective, an
interdisciplinary and international team of researchers, with the participation
of IFISC (UIB-CSIC), have proposed a mathematical framework to unveil the
microscopic structure of a network’s memory. Their results suggest that,
contrary to previously assumed, it is not possible to reduce the structure of
such memory to a number: memory is inherently high-dimensional, it is not just
one number, it is more like a shape. As Richard Feynman famously said, “there
is more room at the bottom”, and this is true for network’s memory.
Furthermore, they showed that inside such memory shape, weird things happen. Like
the emergence of so-called virtual loops, consisting in resonance effects that
happen when the future of a link depends on the past of a second link whose
future, in turn, depends on the past of the first one. While a priori only a
mathematical curiosity, it turns out that these virtual loops are physically
felt by the system: the outcome of an epidemic process running on top of a
network is very different if virtual loops emerge.The researchers applied this
framework to characterize the memory of a large number of real-world networks,
including urban transport networks in European cities (such as bus, train or
metro), cortical brain networks, communication networks (SMS or email) and even
contact networks between university students. Studying these systems, they
found, among other results, that network memory is much higher in offline
networks. In other words, a current state has a greater capacity to affect
future configurations since offline social interactions are more mediated by
tight schedules, which facilitate the emergence of various orders of memory. The
analysis of real-world temporal networks also revealed that there are
asymmetries in the contribution of links to the evolution of the network in
terms of followers/influencers. All together provides evidence that memory
shapes can very heterogeneous in real-world systems. The manuscript also provides
implementations of the algorithms proposed hoping that their framework will
prompt further studies and applications in other areas of complex systems.
Williams, O.E., Lacasa, L., Millán, A.P. et al. The
shape of memory in temporal networks. Nat Commun 13, 499 (2022). Doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-28123-zhttp://ifisc.uib-csic.es/en/news/shape-memory-temporal-networks/
IFISC's researchers in the World's top 2% scientists of 2021 according to Stanford's University
Stanford
University has published the World’s Top 2% Scientists 2021, a
global ranking of the world's most cited scientists in various disciplines.
This ranking, considered one of the most prestigious in the world, is based on
bibliometric information from the Scopus database (published by Elsevier) and
includes more than 180,000 of the more than 8 million researchers considered to
be active worldwide. A dozen CSIC researchers in the Balearic Islands,
including researchers from IFISC, appear in this ranking.
In
the ranking of scientific production in 2020, IFISC researchers Massimiliano Zanin, Víctor M. Eguíluz, Ingo Fischer, Miguel C. Soriano, Gian Luca Giorgi,
Claudio Mirasso and Apostolos Argyris are at the top.
On
the other hand, according to the scientific production of the entire research
career until 2020, the researchers Raúl Toral, Claudio Mirasso, Ingo Fischer,
Llorenç Serra and Apostolos Argyris appear in the ranking.
To
compile the list, Scopus data is analysed on the scientists' careers (in this
latest update, from 1996 to the end of 2020), the number of articles published
and the number of times each research has been cited. However, IFISC would like
to point out that this kind of ranking does not objectively evaluate the value
of researchers and should not be used as the only way to quantify the careers
of scientists.
http://ifisc.uib-csic.es/en/news/ifiscs-researchers-worlds-top-2-scientists…
Capturing the diversity of multilingual societies
Multilingualism is a pervasive phenomenon
worldwide with around 6000 spoken languages in 200 nations. In almost every
country, the presence of more than one language naturally leads to speech
communities of different sizes, with many individuals belonging to these
communities using two or more of them. This occurs independently of the
official status and the educational prevalence of those languages. Therefore,
understanding what mechanisms lead to language extinction and which of them
might enable coexistence is key to preserve cultural diversity.
To this end, the IFISC (UIB-CSIC) researchers collected
geolocalized Twitter posts from 16 countries between 2015 and 2019 with the aim
of exploring spatial patterns of language coexistence in multilingual societies.
This allowed them to determine the extent of spatial segregation, defined as
the difference in how speakers of a language group are distributed compared to
the total population. The researchers observed countries or regions with a high
segregation of monolingual communities, such as Switzerland, while others, such
as Catalonia, are a paradigmatic example of the opposite behavior,
characterized by a high mixing among groups.
The work also highlights the fact that in
certain bilingual societies monolingual speakers of one language are virtually
extinct, as is the case in Catalonia, Quebec or the Basque Country. In these
situations, bilinguals act as a linguistic reservoir for the endangered
language, keeping it alive for long periods of time. The proposed mathematical
model takes into account the cultural attachment of bilinguals for one of the
two languages. This preference can act as a defense mechanism of the endangered
language since its use by bilingual speakers may suffice to save it despite a
possibly lower social prestige of this language. The researchers find that this
novel preference parameter is critical to determine whether languages can
coexist or not.
Overall, these findings shed light on the role
of the heterogeneous speech communities in multilingual societies and they may
help shape the objectives of language planning policies in countries where
accelerated changes are threatening cultural diversity.
Capturing the diversity of multilingual
societies. Louf, Thomas; Sánchez, David; Ramasco José J. Physical Review
Research 3, 043146 (1-11) (2021)El Diari de la UIB
http://ifisc.uib-csic.es/en/news/capturing-diversity-multilingual-societies/