Justin harlow new york




















Justin Christopher Harlow, Resides in Kingston Springs, TN. Resides in Harrodsburg, KY. Also known as Justin N Brown. Includes Address 1 Phone 2. Resides in Kissimmee, FL. Includes Address 6 Phone 4 Email 2. Resides in Dallas, TX. Includes Address 3 Phone 7 Email 2. Includes Address 1 Phone 1 Email 1. Resides in Bradenton Beach, FL.

Related To Ann Harlow. Includes Address 5 Phone 1 Email 1. Resides in Raymond, CA. Includes Address 3 Phone 1 Email 2.

Resides in Syracuse, NY. Resides in Asbury Park, NJ. Includes Address 1 Phone 3 Email 1. By Michael Venutolo-Mantovani. Statements like this are normal in conversation with Harlow, as his ideas are regularly pregnant with a multitude of meanings.

If we want to be world class, which I think we can be, we have to embrace those expectations. And just as he arrives at his point, Harlow pivots to one of the other thoughts behind his idea that things need to change. What is it and what did you do with it? Heather Barnett : Slime mold is a single-celled organism, but it joins up with other cells of its kind to form a mass super-cell.

So, what you have is lots of nuclei, individual nucleus from different cells, all operating as one super-organism. So, this is a little yellow blob in a petri-dish that I was invited to take home. The only instructions I was given was that it likes it dark and damp and its favorite food was porridge oats. Justin Harlow: I know people like that [laughter].

Heather Barnett : You know people like that? They like it dark and damp and like porridge oats, yeah, I think we all know a few people like that [laughter]. So, I put it in a shoe-box and watched it, just observed what is was doing. So, I started doing very crude time-lapse studies, taking photographs at intervals to kind of see what it was doing.

It seemed to be moving with intention, it seemed to be making quite reasonable decisions about what it was doing.

So, my study with it just started by observing it in the studio and trying to learn from it, but while I was doing that I was also reading up on it and I found this world of research asking questions of this organism.

Justin Harlow: So. Could you give us more detail on how that experiment worked and some other experiments out there that have used slime mold as the basis for explanation? Heather Barnett : We could be here a very long time. But, there are some really classic experiments that have then inspired further experiments and have inspired all sorts of not only scientific research, but also artistic research or philosophical query as well. So, you mentioned the Tokyo transport system and that was an experiment performed in by a team of scientific researchers and they essentially mapped out the rail system around Tokyo.

So, instead of a station, you would have an oat. They started the slime mold off in Tokyo and it grew. I need to paint the picture of how the slime mold grows. It rationalizes and forms a network between the food nodes.

So, the stations were the food nodes for the slime mold and it grew out and collected all the stations and formed this efficient network between them. And, after a period of just over a day of growth across this area, they overlaid that on top of the actual Tokyo transport network and it was highly accurate. It had replicated the Tokyo transport system. What had taken them decades if not centuries of civil engineering, and urban planning, and negotiation, the slime mold did in just over a day.

So, a lot of computer scientists are interested in working out, how it is making those calculations to optimize those networks, which is useful in human terms if you imagine large distribution companies sending tankers of oils to multiple destinations. What was that project and what were the main takeaways? Heather Barnett : Essentially, it was an interdisciplinary experiment.

So, that meant we invited artists, scientists, urban planners, engineers and ecologists, anybody who was interested in network systems and how complex networks operate at different scales. People were interested from a slime mold scale.

Others were interested at looking at transport systems where the experiment was conducted in New York. Really, we were looking at the city as a super-organism and relating how systems work at a city level, at a human level and at a slime mold level and seeing what relationships we could find between them.

Those networks took place over several days with a core team of artists, designers and scientists working together to devise public experiments. Highly likely. London game that most will be happy to sleep through.

Byes: Falcons, Saints, Jets, 49ers. Los Angeles Chargers at Baltimore Ravens, 1 p. Honestly, the N. Justin Herbert ranks fourth in the N. With teams so evenly matched, this one should come down to the fine points.

Arizona Cardinals at Cleveland Browns, p. To match the Cardinals , Cleveland needs to be ready for another shootout. The Browns narrowly lost, , an emotionally draining game to the Chargers last weekend, when both teams combined for over 1, yards of offense. Both Cleveland and Arizona rank in the top 10 in points per game, and the Cardinals will be playing without Coach Kliff Kingsbury on the sideline after he tested positive for the coronavirus, but the edge here still goes to the undefeated team.

Minnesota Vikings at Carolina Panthers, 1 p. The Panthers will be without Christian McCaffrey, their star running back, for a third consecutive week as he recovers from a hamstring injury. His replacement, Chuba Hubbard, has performed well in his absence, rushing for yards last week. The Vikings , meanwhile, are expecting Dalvin Cook ankle to play. The difference here should be how the quarterbacks fare against each defense. Dallas Cowboys at New England Patriots, p.

New England needed a fourth-quarter rally to beat the Texans last week and injuries along the Patriots offensive line tackle Trent Brown went on the injured reserve list this week mean Mac Jones will have to think fast against pressure.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000