Well its the acronyms of some research groups.

On 31-okt-04, at 13:32, margeret heath wrote:

Dear Francis

Excuse my ignorance, but what do the following acronyms stand for?:
CLWF

This is dutch stands for: Centrum voor Logica en Wetenschapsfilosofie (Philosophy)
http://www.vub.ac.be/CLWF/


COMO

COmputational MOdeling lab (Informatics) http://como.vub.ac.be/

MOSI

Mathematics, Operational research, Statistics and Information systems. http://www.vub.ac.be/MOSI/


Thanks, margeret



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Francis
Heylighen
Sent: Friday, October 22, 2004 8:09 PM
To: Evolution, Complexity and Cognition group
Subject: [ECCO] An update on ECCO organization

Our ECCO group continues to grow at a staggering rate, and this
understandably creates a couple of practical issues, which are making
life rather hectic at the moment. So let me update you on the latest,
but noting that things are changing quickly, and what is the case now
may no longer be so in a week.

Given the growing number of ECCO members, to keep the organization
manageable, I propose to distinguish two categories: 1) "full"
members, and 2) "affiliated" members. The full members are supposed
to have their core academic activities within ECCO (they can have
other, non-academic activities elsewhere), while the affiliated
members do their core research within another research group (e.g.
CLWF, MOSI or COMO), but from time to time participate in ECCO
activities (e.g. seminars or email discussions) and are generally
interested in collaboration with other ECCO members.

In principle, according to VUB rules, it is possible to have "core"
activities in more than one research group, so becoming an ECCO
member does not exclude being engaged in another research group. I
just leave it up to you to decide in how far you want to be involved:
as full or as affiliated members. The practical implication is that
full members are expected to participate in most external or internal
ECCO activities, such as meetings, and in return can count on the
support of the other members, while the affiliated members are merely
informed about the more public and scientific activities, in which
they are free to participate or not.

As a first rule of thumb, I consider all my PhD students to be full
ECCO members, and leave it up to the others to state whether they
want to be listed as "full", or remain "affiliated" by default. This
resulting provisional membership list can be found on
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/ECCO/ Of course, this subdivision will never
be absolute, and some people will fall "in between" the two
categories.

Since we haven't had any public activities lately, let me report on
the internal organization.

First, Marko Rodriguez has joined us last week, on a one-year visit
from the University of California at Santa Cruz, to work on
algorithms to support collective decision-making. He is presently
sharing my office in the CLEA house.

Klaas Chielens has officially started to work on an OZR project about
linguistic aspects of memetics on Oct. 1, but is still waiting for
several practical issues to be settled, such as getting a computer
and an office. Unfortunately, since space is tight in the CLEA house,
it has become difficult to locate more people there, and Klaas will
probably be settled officially in the faculty LW in their new room
for researchers, B407.

Both Mixel Kiemen (computer scientist interested in consciousness and
cognition) and Laetitia De Jaegher (legal expert interested in
systems approaches) are exploring ways to fund their PhD research in
ECCO, via the FWO or European projects.

Andreas Loengarov (sociologist working on computer simulations of
social networks and evolution) has received an offer to make a PhD in
Scotland, but will anyway try to keep close contact with ECCO and
visit regularly.

Erden Goktepe is a Turkish political scientist who will arrive in
Brussels on Nov. 1 to visit ECCO and discuss the possibilities to
come and work here on a PhD, in which he would apply systems and
complexity thinking to international relations. He is also applying
for funding, and seems optimistic that he will get a job that could
pay for his studies.

Dirk Bollen, younger brother of my former PhD student Johan, is a
psychologist interested in situated and embodied cognition. He would
like to collaborate with ECCO and will shortly come to meet us and
discuss the possibilities.

Julien Libbrecht has a PhD in philosophy and is working half-time in
health-care management. He would like to do PostDoc research in ECCO
on applying cybernetic thinking to the organization of health care.

Given these likely new arrivals, it seems that our first priority
will be to find sufficient office space on campus. Any suggestions
about unused spaces anywhere on the VUB are most welcome! Ideally,
all full ECCO members (some 8 people) should find a space in the same
building or wing, but the given the tightness of space, this will be
a difficult exercise...

--

Francis Heylighen
Center "Leo Apostel"
Free University of Brussels
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/HEYL.html



--- --- --- ---
Mixel Kiemen: http://www.mixel.be/
PhD student at ECCO: http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/ECCO/



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