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Journal of Biotechnology and Phytochemistry| Volume: 2

October 25-26, 2018 | Frankfurt, Germany

Joint Event

Biotechnology & Medical Microbiology

World Congress on

3

rd

International Conference on

Food Science & Technology

T

his talk presents a self-similar pattern type called T-pattern,

a kind of statistical pseudo fractal recurring with significant

translation symmetry on a single discrete dimension. It now

comes with a specialized detection (evolution) algorithm

implemented as the software THEMETM for Windows which

has allowed the discovery of numerous and complex interaction

patterns in many kinds of human and animal interactions as

well as in neuronal interactions within living brains. T-patterns

have also been detected in interactions between robots and

humans and seem characteristic for the structure of DNA

and text. A definition of T-patterns is presented as well as

the essentials of the current detection algorithms including

examples of detected T-patterns using the especially developed

T-pattern diagrams. The T-pattern is now a part of a larger set of

pattern types and relations called T-system that will be shortly

described including examples of patterning detected with

specially developedalgorithms also implemented inTheme. The

potential importance of T-patterns is finally illustrated through

a comparison between human mass societies and the mass

societies of proteins within biological cells (sometimes called

“Cell City”), where self-similarity of organization evolved over

billions of years is striking from nano to human scales based on

self-similar T-patterns, but appearing suddenly among large-

brain animals in humans only, and partly based on massively

copied standardized T-patterned letter strings such as holy, legal

and scientific texts. The invention of writing and thus a durable

external T-patterned memory only a few thousand years ago --

a biological eye-blink -- is apparently by far the greatest game

changer in the history of homo sapiens allowing the explosive

development of science, technology and the only large-brained

mass-societies as cultural heritage became mostly external

to brains. The analogy and self-similarity are striking with the

inventionofDNAbytheRNAworldcountlessmillionsofyearsago.

Speaker Biography

Magnus S Magnusson is a Research Professor. He completed PhD in 1983 from the

University of Copenhagen. He is an author of the T-pattern model. He presented

numerous papers and invited talks at international mathematical, neuroscience,

proteomics, bioinformatics and science of religion conferences and at leading

universities in Europe, USA and Japan. He is a Deputy Director during 1983-1988 at

Anthropology Laboratory, Museum of Natural History, Paris and repeatedly invited

temporary Professor in Psychology and Ethology (Biology of Behavior) at the University

of Paris (V, VIII & XIII). Since 1991, he is the Founder and Director of the Human

Behavior Laboratory, University of Iceland, in formalized collaboration between

28 European and American universities based on “Magnusson’s analytical model”

initiated at University René Descartes Paris V, Sorbonne, in 1995.

e:

msm@hi.is

Magnus S Magnusson

University of Iceland, Iceland

T-patterns and external memory in human and protein mass-societies: The naked ape

suddenly a string-controled citizen