20
MAI
MAI
Complexity and Curiosity A tribute to Prof. Yi-Cheng Zhang
Colloque / Congrès / Forum
Ouvert au grand public
20.05.2026 14:00
Présentiel
The Department of Physics at the University of Fribourg is pleased to host a one-day symposium dedicated to Prof. Yi-Cheng Zhang, one of the most prominent and highly cited scientists in our faculty.
The symposium will focus on:
• Statistical physics
• Non-equilibrium phenomena
• Complex networks
• Information economics
Prof. Yi-Cheng Zhang made groundbreaking contributions to the physics of growing interfaces, most notably through the formulation of the Kardar–Parisi–Zhang (KPZ) equation, which describes the evolution of noisy growing interfaces. This framework is highly relevant to
biological systems such as bacterial colony fronts, fungal growth, and cell monolayer
expansion.
Beyond interface growth, he has made seminal contributions to complex networks and
information economics, including the introduction of the Minority Game, a paradigmatic
model for collective behavior in adaptive systems.
More broadly, the statistical physics of complex systems underpins bio-inspired materials, self-assembly, and pattern formation. Migration, growth, and assembly processes in nature are
fundamentally governed by collective, often non-equilibrium dynamics.
Invited Speakers:
14h00-14h30 Paolo de Los Rios, EPFL, Lausanne
Theory and experiments on protein chaperone function
14h30-15h00 Matus Medo, University of Bern
Dark matter in genomic analyses
15h00-15h30 Damien Challet, Laboratoire MICS, CentraleSupélec, Université Paris Saclay
Inference: breaking the curse of optimality and causality
15h30-16h00 Coffee break
16h00-16h30 Matteo Marsili, International Centre for Theoretical Physics, Trieste
Enjoying physics beyond physics... and football
16h30-16h50 Discussion Session
Physics Colloquium:
16h50-17h50 Yi-Cheng Zhang, University of Fribourg
Retrospective and perspective on my adventures in complexity sciences research
18h00-19h00 Apéritif
The symposium will focus on:
• Statistical physics
• Non-equilibrium phenomena
• Complex networks
• Information economics
Prof. Yi-Cheng Zhang made groundbreaking contributions to the physics of growing interfaces, most notably through the formulation of the Kardar–Parisi–Zhang (KPZ) equation, which describes the evolution of noisy growing interfaces. This framework is highly relevant to
biological systems such as bacterial colony fronts, fungal growth, and cell monolayer
expansion.
Beyond interface growth, he has made seminal contributions to complex networks and
information economics, including the introduction of the Minority Game, a paradigmatic
model for collective behavior in adaptive systems.
More broadly, the statistical physics of complex systems underpins bio-inspired materials, self-assembly, and pattern formation. Migration, growth, and assembly processes in nature are
fundamentally governed by collective, often non-equilibrium dynamics.
Invited Speakers:
14h00-14h30 Paolo de Los Rios, EPFL, Lausanne
Theory and experiments on protein chaperone function
14h30-15h00 Matus Medo, University of Bern
Dark matter in genomic analyses
15h00-15h30 Damien Challet, Laboratoire MICS, CentraleSupélec, Université Paris Saclay
Inference: breaking the curse of optimality and causality
15h30-16h00 Coffee break
16h00-16h30 Matteo Marsili, International Centre for Theoretical Physics, Trieste
Enjoying physics beyond physics... and football
16h30-16h50 Discussion Session
Physics Colloquium:
16h50-17h50 Yi-Cheng Zhang, University of Fribourg
Retrospective and perspective on my adventures in complexity sciences research
18h00-19h00 Apéritif
Quand?
20.05.2026 14:00
Où?
Organisation
Intervenants
Invited Speakers:
14h00-14h30 Paolo de Los Rios, EPFL, Lausanne
Theory and experiments on protein chaperone function
14h30-15h00 Matus Medo, University of Bern
Dark matter in genomic analyses
15h00-15h30 Damien Challet, Laboratoire MICS, CentraleSupélec, Université Paris Saclay
Inference: breaking the curse of optimality and causality
15h30-16h00 Coffee break
16h00-16h30 Matteo Marsili, International Centre for Theoretical Physics, Trieste
Enjoying physics beyond physics... and football
16h30-16h50 Discussion Session
Physics Colloquium:
16h50-17h50 Yi-Cheng Zhang, University of Fribourg
Retrospective and perspective on my adventures in complexity sciences research
18h00-19h00 Apéritif
14h00-14h30 Paolo de Los Rios, EPFL, Lausanne
Theory and experiments on protein chaperone function
14h30-15h00 Matus Medo, University of Bern
Dark matter in genomic analyses
15h00-15h30 Damien Challet, Laboratoire MICS, CentraleSupélec, Université Paris Saclay
Inference: breaking the curse of optimality and causality
15h30-16h00 Coffee break
16h00-16h30 Matteo Marsili, International Centre for Theoretical Physics, Trieste
Enjoying physics beyond physics... and football
16h30-16h50 Discussion Session
Physics Colloquium:
16h50-17h50 Yi-Cheng Zhang, University of Fribourg
Retrospective and perspective on my adventures in complexity sciences research
18h00-19h00 Apéritif
Pièces jointes
