News Release

Vienna is host to the world's largest conference on network science

NetSci 2023, organized by the Complexity Science Hub and Central European University, will bring together over 850 researchers from 50 countries

Meeting Announcement

Complexity Science Hub

Vienna is host to the world's largest conference on network science

image: NetSci 2023, organized by CSH and CEU, will bring together over 850 researchers from 50 countries view more 

Credit: Alberto Pino

[Vienna, June 28, 2023] – For the first time, Vienna will become the global center of network scientists from July 10 to 14, 2023. Researchers from physics, computer science, biology, social sciences, economics, and more will gather at NetSci 2023, the flagship conference of the Network Science Society. This year’s edition is organized by the Complexity Science Hub (CSH) and the Central European University (CEU). 

"NetSci 2023 is undoubtedly the largest and most important event in network science. It brings together researchers from different disciplines who otherwise rarely have the opportunity to exchange ideas. I am particularly looking forward to the new ideas that will emerge among the participants and contribute to further developing this exciting field of research," says CSH president Stefan Thurner, one of the scientific chairs of the conference. 

Interdisciplinary and diverse

A key component of Netsci's program is its interdisciplinarity and diversity. Shlomo Havlin, from Bar-Ilan University in Israel, will be one of the keynote speakers. Havlin has made major contributions to the study of dependent networks such as power grids and communications networks, and will discuss the application of superconducting elements. 

The conference will also feature Mirta Galesic, a professor at the Santa Fe Institute and a resident scientist at CSH. Galesic, who studies complex social phenomena, will discuss how internal dynamics and external influences shape our beliefs, and why some people and collectives change their beliefs more readily than others.

Why network science?

János Kertész, head of the Department of Network and Data Science at CEU, outlines the importance of the emerging field of network science. "Network and networking are buzzwords – with good reason, as knowledge about social or economic structures can boost efficiency considerably. Network science, the discipline for studying structures produced by interactions, has undergone explosive development during the last decades,” says Kertész, who’s also one of the scientific chairs of NetSci 2023. 

“We uncovered the scaffold of complexity, discovered the laws governing the growth of large networks, and understood the dynamic processes on them. It brings fruits for a wide range of fields from epidemiology to drug design, from mitigating economic crises to improving the internet, and from fighting crime to mapping out the connections in the brain," explains Kertész.

Vienna

Vienna's hosting of NetSci 2023 emphasizes the city's importance as a science hub. The city is home to 24 universities with nearly 200,000 students and almost 30,000 lecturers. The CSH and the Department of Network and Data Science at CEU are Austria's leading network science institutions. The city of Vienna, among others, supports them.


 

NETSCI 2023

July 10-14, 2023 (8:30-18:30), Universitätsring 1, 1010 Vienna | Go to the conference program.

 

ABOUT CSH

The mission of the Complexity Science Hub (CSH) is to host, educate, and inspire complex systems scientists dedicated to making sense of Big Data to boost science and society. Scientists at the Complexity Science Hub develop methods for the scientific, quantitative, and predictive understanding of complex systems.

The CSH is a joint initiative of AIT Austrian Institute of Technology, Central European University CEU, Danube University Krems, Graz University of Technology, Medical University of Vienna, TU Wien, VetMedUni Vienna, Vienna University of Economics and Business, and Austrian Economic Chambers (WKO). 

 

ABOUT CEU

One of the world’s most international universities, a unique founding mission positions Central European University as both an acclaimed center for the study of economic, historical, social and politicalchallenges, and a source of support for building open and democratic societies that respect human rights and human dignity. CEU is accredited in the United States and Austria, and offers English-language bachelor's, master's and doctoral programs in the social sciences, the humanities, law, environmental and network sciences, management and public policy. CEU enrols more than 1,400 students from over 100 countries, with faculty from over 50 countries.     

 In 2019 CEU relocated from Hungary to Austria as the Hungarian government revoked its ability to issue U.S.-accredited degrees in the country. As a result, CEU offers all of its degree programs in Vienna, Austria, and retains a non-degree, research and civic engagement presence in Budapest, Hungary, through its CEU Democracy Institute, the Institute for Advanced Study, the CEU Summer School and The Vera and Donald Blinken Open Society Archives (OSA), and its Hungarian language public educational programs and public lectures.      

 


 

Accreditation for Journalists

Journalists can apply for accreditation for the conference. Please contact Anja Böck or Susanne Hofmarcher. 

Anja Böck 

Complexity Science Hub Vienna

boeck@csh.ac.at 

Tel.: +43 1 59991 601 

www.csh.ac.at

 

Susanne Hofmarcher 

Central European University

hofmarchers@ceu.edu

Tel.: +43 1 25230 7414

www.ceu.edu


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