The Franke Program in Science and the Humanities and John Templeton Foundation

Talk Title: Investigating Nature Using Simulations and Interventional Data across Disciplines

December 2023
Friday 15th - 9:45am

Although theoretical guidelines and simulations are important in identifying relations between observables across several fields, from physics, to biology and machine learning, the way simulations are used or the possibility/availability of interventional data varies. Dr. Megas will review and compare illustrative examples of how simulations are used to investigate nature in high energy physics and biology, and then discuss the importance of interventional data such as the ones compiled in the Human Cell Atlas project in inferring causal relations in biology.

About the Speaker

Stathis Megas

Postdoctoral Researcher
Wellcome Sanger Institute, United Kingdom

During his BSc, Stathis created the cMSSM simulation at 8TeV for the CMS experiment at CERN and interpreted it using single-lepton methods to calculate exclusion limits for supersymmetric particles. Then he moved on to study the interplay between topological quantum gravity, topological quantum field theory and conformal field theory for his PhD at UCLA. During his time at the University of Cambridge and the Wellcome Sanger Institute, he is focusing on designing new deep learning algorithms based on ideas from quantum field theory and causal inference to improve human health and test biophysical theories.

More Information and Resources

Video of Talk

Investigating Nature Using Simulations and Interventional Data across Disciplines