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Journal of Materials Science and Nanotechnology | Volume: 2
November 22-23, 2018 | Paris, France
Materials Physics and Materials Science
International Conference on
T
he biology of animal and human behavior is recent indeed,
with its first Nobel prize in 1973 shared between N.
Tinbergen, K. Lorenz and K. von Frisch. The smallest animals of
interest then where insects. Many have been amazed to learn
that millions of years before apes existed, insects invented
mass-societies, agriculture and animal farming. The title of
Konrad Lorenz’s Nobel prize lecture was: “Analogy as a source
of knowledge”. But there was no talk of behavior of nano scale
entities nor their societies or self-similarity. Like the RNA world
billions of years before, humanity has in a biological eyeblink
developed its own external memory also based on purely
informational strings, text, allowing mass societies with their
science and technology and most recently the discovery their
own building blocks, biological cells, protein mass societies,
thus exemplifying the (fractal) self-similarity recently discovered
so widely throughout the universe.
This talk concerns a recurrent hierarchical self-similar fractal-
like pattern type, called T-pattern characterized by significant
translational symmetry. After its abundant detection with the
dedicated algorithms of the THEMETM software in human,
animal and neuronal behavior and interaction, that is, both
between and within living brains, T-patterning turns out
be characteristic of DNA and thus describe a multitude of
phenomena on very different scales in time and space, from
nano to human mass-social scales. It thus seems that nanoscale
proteomic research not only has a great medical future, but also
looking outwards where in a biological eyeblink the “naked ape”
with the speed of lateral exchange of T-patterned information
strings has created mass-societies unique among large-
brained animals. Reflecting its innermost biological structure
as the naked ape suddenly has become a string enabled and
controlled mass-social citizen. Analogies of patterning across so
many levels of organization and orders of magnitude suggesting
something essential.
Speaker Biography
Magnus S Magnusson is a research professor and completed his PhD in 1983 at
Copenhagen University. He is the author of the T-pattern model initially focused on
the real-time organization of behavior and Co-directed DNA analysis. He worked on
numerous papers and as well as keynotes at international mathematical, neuroscience,
proteomics, bioinformatics and religion conferences in Europe, USA and Japan. He
is the deputy director 1983-1988 in Museum of Mankind, Paris. He was an invited
professor in psychology and biology of behavior at University of Paris (V, VIII & XIII). He
is the founder and director of Human Behavior Laboratory, in the University of Iceland.
In formalized collaboration between 32 European and American universities based
on “Magnusson’s analytical model” initiated at University Paris V, Sorbonne, in 1995.
e:
msm@hi.isMagnus S Magnusson
University of Iceland, Iceland
T-patterns and self-similarity from the RNA world to cell city,
naked apes and string-controlled mass-social humans