Past Outreach Activities
Here is an overview of our past events and activities.
Here is an overview of our past events and activities.
On Girl’s Day 2024, our members Palina Bartashevich, Asieh Daneshi, Soledad Traverso, Anna Lange, and David Mezey, with the help of our lab managers Matthis Kaiser, Michael Brück, and Rolf Struikmans, have shown the girls around SCIoI, offering hands-on demonstrations on topics such as Virtual Reality, interacting with robots, fish swarms, and mouse lockboxes. The girls will also visit the laser cutter and get to build their own 3D puzzle robot.
SCIoI has participated at the Berlin Science Week (BSW) 2023, under the theme “Dare to Know” with two performances, and also won a prize. Read more about it here.
The exhibition »Airbound« features climate fictions and speculative everyday scenarios – developed in an open process by collaborators from society, science, and design. Through speculative installations, »Airbound« provides space to discuss urgent geopolitical issues. At stake are the contested knowledge of the climate, the destructive use of joint resources, and the injustices that are inherently connected. Air is critically bound to these – as collective, active, and intelligent material.
This year, SCIoI had a long and exciting Lange Nacht der Wissenschaften. Our Open Lab event at MAR’s Capek Lab featured presentations and demonstrations on swarm robots, vision, and ethics by Mohsen Raoufi, Nicolas Roth, and Nina Poth, while the large pub quiz at the TU tent, organized by all the Berlin clusters together, brought a large audience together as they competed for most knowledgeable team! Read more about it here.
Three air-themed CollActive Materials Workshops is part of the BUA-funded project CollActive Materials, a joint science communication project of the two Clusters of Excellence Science of Intelligence and Matters of Activity. In this project, the two clusters draw from their respective thematic areas to imagine our possible futures with intelligent materials in a collective speculation that involves scientists, designers, and the general public. In three independent co-designed workshops, we explore the properties of air as a material, negotiate its role in our lives, and imagine our possible (and impossible) futures with it. More information here.
On Girls’ Day 2023 our members Maria Ott, Julten Abdelhalim, Vito Mengers & the RBO Team, Magdalena Yordanova, Nina Poth, and Lea Musiolek give inspiring talks on how researchers from different fields approach the topic of intelligence, followed by a visit of the labs. More info here.
The first conference and exhibition of the Cluster of Excellence Science of Intelligence (SCIoI) in Berlinwas held in September 2023. Leading experts from science and politics, as well as journalists and the broader public came together to discuss the diverse facets of intelligence research. From individual, social, and collective principles of intelligence to the ethics of AI, the event offered a display of interdisciplinary collaboration and advancements from within the cluster, shedding light on the challenges of developing intelligent technologies. In guided tours through the accompanying exhibition that were held throughout the day, attendees got into exchange with the scientists and learned about the most recent research on intelligence straight from the labs. Read more about it here.
Three different events to explore play around the concept of intelligence, and its implications for scientific research. A joint Workshop Matters of Activity and Science of Intelligence on research bio-designs; a Panel Discussion with Dafna Burema, Mattis Jacobs, and Jonas Frenkel on ethical questions on artificial Intelligence; a Science Cluster Slam full of exciting experimental setups with Benjamin Lang.
In this event, The RBO Lab Team has given three exciting demonstrations of recent advances in robotics: acoustic sensing with soft robot fingers, robot hand teleoperation, and moving robotic hand perceiving spatial depths.
Many animals show amazing cognitive abilities. Using a robofish, David Bierbach has given a talk about some of the remarkable abilities that can be observed in schools of fishes, like anticipating future behavior, and collective synchronization.
In this demonstration Mohsen Raoufi has shown how a swarm of robots can solve problems, make accurate decisions, and perform tasks collectively using bio-inspired algorithms.
In this demonstration Dustin Lehmann has shown visitors a group of balancing robots working together to learn difficult motions and moving together like a collective.
To perceive the world around us, we constantly make rapid eye movements called saccades. In this experiment, Richard Schweitzer, Angelica Godinez, and Mara Doering have used high-speed recording and presentation devices to highlight the importance of people’s saccades and show their visual consequences.
What do sensitive robots, gripping plants and creative bacteria have in common? Let’s find out together! In the “CollActive Materials” experimental laboratory, a joint project of SCIoI and MoA, research and society come together to explore the materials of the future: Can they be more active or more intelligent than the materials of today? Come by to discover surprisingly living materials, and tell us your ideas and wishes for the future with Pia Bideau and Caroline Duncan.
For the series “Meet the Scientist” (5 May, 2022), SCIoI member Ralf Kurvers presented data collected in the Humboldt Lab over the last six months and gave insights into his findings and the fascinating field of collective psychology. Read more information here, or check out some impressions of the event here.
On Girls’ Day 2022 (28 April 22), SCIoI members Jinan Allan and Marah Halawa give an overview of their life as women in science, including ambitions and possible challenges, and show their labs in the cluster.
Five evening talks to explore the diversity of intelligent behaviors, from robotic cameras to swarm intelligence. Speakers: Guillermo Gallego, Alex Kacelnik, Marc Toussaint, Pawel Romanczuk, Ralph Kurvers, and Fritz Francisco.
A fun evening with Science of Intelligence (SCIoI) and Heidelberg’s Science Pub Quiz.
What is intelligence? Do beets float in water? Why should you pet your basil? SCIoI members Aravind Battaje and Lynn Schmittwilken, SCIoI researchers in the fields of neurosciences and robotics, spoke about their latest research and answered our most burning questions about brains and how computers can perceive the world.
For this year’s digital edition of the Lange Nacht der Wissenschaftem, David Bierbach prepared a demonstration explaining how Robofish, a robotic fish, can help us better understand group behavior in fish.
Lange Nacht der Wisssenschaften 2021.
In this talk, Pawel Romanczuk and Ralf Kurvers from our Excellence Cluster explored swarm intelligence in fish and humans, investigating the role of single individuals and social interactions in collective decisions, also exploring when collectives make good decisions, and when they go wrong.
On Girls’ Day 2021 (April 22), SCIoI member Lynn Schmittwilken gave an inspiring talk about what it’s like to be a vision scientist, addressing 20 young girls from all around Germany. More information here.
In March 2021, SCIoI participated in Brain Awareness Week with two events:
a lab demonstration on optical illusions, organized together with + the Active Perception and Cognition Lab (Martin Rolfs), and a talk about mindfulness for PhD students organized in collaboration with Scholar Minds and the Berlin School of Mind and Brain.
The new Humboldt Labor exhibition in Berlin presents SCIoI together with all other Excellence Clusters in Berlin through a dynamic and fascinating exhibition encompassing the theme of swarm intelligence.
Five evening talks to discover intelligence seen from the different disciplines.
Rainer Mühlhoff and John-Dylan Haynes participated in a fishbowl discussion on predictive AI on 23 June 2020.
Event canceled due to Covid19.
Robots playing soccer, lab mice, visual experiments: SCIoI members demonstrated their science and talk about their discoveries for an entire evening.
An overview of our scientific work
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