Algorithmic Information, Induction and Observers in Physics

COVID-19 information for PI Residents and Visitors

Conference Date: 
Monday, April 9, 2018 (All day) to Friday, April 13, 2018 (All day)
Scientific Areas: 
Quantum Foundations

 

Our universe is of astonishing simplicity: almost all physical observations can in principle be described by a few theories that have short mathematical descriptions. But there is a field of computer science which quantifies simplicity, namely algorithmic information theory (AIT). In this workshop, we will discuss emerging connections between AIT and physics, some of which have recently shown up in fields like quantum information theory and thermodynamics. In particular, AIT and physics share one goal: namely, to predict future observations given previous data. In fact, there exists a gold standard of prediction in AIT called Solomonoff induction which is also applied in artificial intelligence. This motivates us to look at a broader question: what is the role of induction in physics? For example, can quantum states be understood as Bayesian states of belief? Can physics be understood as a computation in some sense? What is the role of the observer, i.e. the agent that is supposed to perform the predictions? These and related topics will be discussed by a diverse group of researchers from different disciplines.

Sponsorship for this workshop has been provided by:

  • Larissa Albantakis, University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Ämin Baumeler, is Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna
  • Časlav Brukner, Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna
  • Giulio Chiribella, University of Oxford
  • John DeBrota, University of Massachusetts  Boston
  • Gemma de las Cuevas, University of Innsbruck
  • Lucien Hardy, Perimeter Institute
  • Stephan Hartmann, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy
  • Dominic Horsman, University of Grenoble
  • Marcus Hutter, Australian National University
  • Dominik Janzing, Max Planck Institute
  • Wayne Myrvold, University of Western Ontario
  • Ruediger Schack, Royal Holloway University of London
  • Tom Sterkenburg, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy
  • Stefan Wolf, Universit della Svizzera italiana
  • Larissa Albantakis, University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Ämin Baumeler, is Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna
  • Charles Bedard, University of Montreal
  • Časlav Brukner, Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna
  • Giulio Chiribella, University of Oxford
  • Xavier Coiteux-Roy, Universit della Svizzera italiana
  • Gemma de las Cuevas, University of Innsbruck
  • John DeBrota, University of Massachusetts  Boston
  • Lucien Hardy, Perimeter Institute
  • Stephan Hartmann, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy
  • Dominic Horsman, University of Grenoble
  • Marcus Hutter, Australian National University
  • Dominik Janzing, Max Planck Institute
  • Ryszard Kostecki, University of Warsaw
  • Ravi Kunjwal, Perimeter Institute
  • Wayne Myrvold, University of Western Ontario
  • Philippos Papayannopoulos, University of Western Ontario
  • Nitica Sakharwade, Perimeter Institute
  • Ruediger Schack, Royal Holloway University of London
  • John Selby, Perimeter Institute
  • Rob Spekkens, Perimeter Institute
  • Tom Sterkenburg, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy
  • Stefan Wolf, Universit della Svizzera italiana

Monday, April 9, 2018

Time

Event

Location

9:30 – 10:00am

Registration

Reception

10:00 – 11:00am

Lucien Hardy, Perimeter Institute
Using humans to switch the settings in a Bell experiment

Bob Room

11:00 – 11:30am

Coffee Break

Bistro – 1st Floor

11:30 – 12:30pm

Giulio Chiribella, University of Oxford
Quantum speedup in testing causal hypotheses

Bob Room

12:30 – 2:00pm

Lunch

Bistro – 2nd Floor

2:00 – 3:00pm

Stefan Wolf, Università della Svizzera italiana
The Logic of Physical Law

Bob Room

3:00 – 3:30pm

Coffee Break

Bistro – 1st Floor

3:30 – 4:30pm

Ämin Baumeler, Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna
When Causality Is Relaxed: Classical Correlations, Computation, and Time Travel

Bob Room

4:30pm – 5:30pm

Discussion 1

Sky Room

 

Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Time

Event

Location

9:30 – 10:30am

Gemma de las Cuevas, University of Innsbruck
On the concepts of universality in physics and computer science

Bob Room

10:30 – 11:00am

Coffee Break

Bistro – 1st Floor

11:00 – 12:00pm

Časlav Brukner, Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna
A no-go theorem for observer-independent facts

Bob Room

12:00 – 2:00pm

Lunch

Bistro – 2nd Floor

2:00 – 3:00pm

John DeBrota, University of Massachusetts  Boston
Symmetric Informationally Complete Measurements Identify the Essential Difference between Classical and Quantum

Bob Room

3:00 – 3:30pm

Coffee Break

Bistro – 1st Floor

3:30 – 4:30pm

Tom Sterkenburg, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy
Algorithmic information theory: a critical perspective

Bob Room

4:30 – 5:30pm

Discussion 2

Sky Room

 

Wednesday, April 11, 2018

Time

Event

Location

10:00 – 11:00am

Ruediger Schack, Royal Holloway University of London
Normative probability in quantum mechanics

Bob Room

11:00 – 11:30am

Coffee Break

Bistro – 1st Floor

11:30 – 1:00pm

Markus Hutter, Australian National University
Introduction to Algorithmic Information Theory and Tutorial

Bob Room

1:00 – 2:00pm

Lunch

Bistro – 2nd Floor

2:00 – 3:30pm

Colloquium
Matthew Evans, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Gravitational Waves: Discoveries and Future Detectors

Time Room

3:30 – 4:00pm

Coffee Break

Bistro – 1st Floor

4:00 – 5:00pm

Wayne Myrvold, University of Western Ontario
Can quantum states be understood as Bayesian states of belief?

Bob Room

5:00 – 6:00pm

Discussion 3

Reflecting Lounge

 

Thursday, April 12, 2018

Time

Event

Location

10:00 – 11:00am

Markus Hutter, Australian National University
Observer Localization in Multiverse Theories

Bob Room

11:00 - 11:10am Photo TBA

11:10 – 11:30am

Coffee Break

Bistro – 1st Floor

11:30 – 12:30pm

Markus Mueller, Perimeter Institute and Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna
From observers to physics via algorithmic information theory

Bob Room

12:30 – 2:00pm

Lunch

Bistro – 2nd Floor

2:00 – 3:00pm

Dominik Janzing, Max Planck Institute
Causal inference rules for algorithmic dependences and why they reproduce the arrow of time

Bob Room

3:00 – 3:30pm

Coffee Break

Bistro – 1st Floor

3:30 – 4:30pm

Larissa Albantakis, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Being vs. Happening: information from the intrinsic perspective of the system itself

Bob Room

4:30 – 5:30pm

Discussion 4

Sky Room

5:30pm onwards

Pub Night

Bistro – 1st Floor

 

Friday, April 13, 2018

Time

Event

Location

10:00 – 11:00am

Stephan Hartmann, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy
Argumentation, Conditionals, and the Use of Information Theoretic Concepts in Bayesianism

Bob Room

11:00 – 11:30am

Coffee Break

Bistro – 1st Floor

11:30 – 12:30pm

Dominic Horsman, University of Grenoble
When does a physical systems compute: Is physics more or less than computation?

Bob Room

12:30 – 2:00pm

Lunch

Bistro – 2nd Floor

2:00 – 3:00pm

Discussion 5

Reflecting Lounge

3:00 – 3:30pm

Coffee Break

Bistro – 1st Floor

3:30 – 4:30pm

Informal Discussion

Sky Room

 

 

 

Larissa Albantakis, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Being vs. Happening: information from the intrinsic perspective of the system itself

When applied to a physical system, the two main, established notions of information, Shannon Information and Algorithmic Information, explicitly neglect the mechanistic structure of the system under evaluation. Shannon information treats the system as a channel and quantifies correlations between the system’s inputs and outputs, or between its past and future states. Algorithmic information quantifies the length of the shortest program capable of reproducing the system’s outputs or dynamics. The goal in both cases is to predict the system’s behavior from the perspective of an extrinsic investigator. From the intrinsic perspective of the system itself, however, information must be physically instantiated to be causally relevant. For every ‘bit’, there must be some mechanism that is in one of two (or several) possible states, and which state it is in must matter to other mechanisms. In other words, the state must be “a difference that makes a difference” and implementation matters. By examining the informational and causal properties of artificial organisms (“animats”) controlled by small, adaptive neural networks (Markov Brains), I will discuss necessary requirements for intrinsic information, autonomy, and agency.

Ämin Baumeler, Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna

When Causality Is Relaxed: Classical Correlations, Computation, and Time Travel

Following Stefan Wolf’s talk, we address the doubts expressed on fundamental space-time causality. Usually it is assumed that causal structures represent a definite partial ordering of events. By relaxing that notion one risks problems of logical nature. Yet, as we show, there exists a logically consistent world beyond the causal, even in the classical realm where quantum theory is not invoked. We explore the classical correlations within and the computational limits of that world. It turns out that relaxing causality in that fashion does not allow for efficient computation of NP-hard problems. These results are related to closed time-like curves: Contrary to previous models of time travel, which necessitate quantum theory and violate the NP-hardness assumption, we obtain a computationally tame model for classical and reversible time travel where freedom of choice is unrestricted.

Časlav Brukner, Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna

A no-go theorem for observer-independent facts

In his famous thought experiment, Wigner assigns an entangled state to the composite quantum system made up of Wigner's friend and her observed system. While the two of them have different accounts of the process, each Wigner and his friend can in principle verify his/her respective state assignments by performing an appropriate measurement. As manifested through a click in a detector or a specific position of the pointer, the outcomes of these measurements can be regarded as reflecting directly observable "facts". Reviewing arXiv:1507.05255, I will derive a no-go theorem for observer-independent facts, which would be common both for Wigner and the friend. I will then analyze this result in the context of a newly derived theorem in arXiv:1604.07422, where Frauchiger and Renner prove that "single-world interpretations of quantum theory cannot be self-consistent". It is argued that "self-consistency" has the same implications as the assumption that observational statements of different observers can be compared in a single (and hence an observer-independent) theoretical framework. The latter, however, may not be possible, if the statements are to be understood as relational in the sense that their determinacy is relative to an observer.

Giulio Chiribella, University of Oxford

Quantum speedup in testing causal hypotheses

An important ingredient of the scientific method is the ability to test alternative hypotheses on the causal relations relating a given set of variables. In the classical world, this task can be achieved with a variety of statistical, information-theoretic, and computational techniques. In this talk I will address the extension from the classical scenario to the quantum scenario, and, more generally, to general probabilistic theories. After introducing the basic hypothesis testing framework, I will focus on a concrete example, where the task is to identify the causal intermediary of a given variable, under the promise that the causal intermediary belongs to a given set of candidate variables. In this problem, I will show that quantum physics offers an exponential advantage over the best classical strategies, with a doubling of the exponential decay of the error probability. The source of the advantage can be found in the combination of two quantum features: the complementarity between the information on the causal structure and other properties of the cause effect relation, and the ability to perform multiple tests in a quantum superposition. An interesting possibility is that one of the "hidden principles" of quantum theory could be on our ability to test alternative causal hypotheses.

John DeBrota, University of Massachusetts Boston

Symmetric Informationally Complete Measurements Identify the Essential Difference between Classical and Quantum.

In this talk we describe a general procedure for associating a minimal informationally-complete quantum measurement (or MIC) with a probabilistic representation of quantum theory. Towards this, we make use of the idea that the Born Rule is a consistency criterion among subjectively assigned probabilities rather than a tool to set purely physically mandated probabilities. In our setting, the difference between quantum theory and classical statistical physics is the way their physical assumptions augment bare probability theory: Classical statistical physics corresponds to a trivial augmentation, while quantum theory makes crucial use of the Born Rule. We prove that the representation of the Born Rule obtained from a symmetric informationally-complete measurement (or SIC) minimizes the distinction between the two theories in at least two senses, one functional, the other geometric. Our results suggest that this representation supplies a natural vantage point from which to identify their essential differences, and, perhaps thereby, a set of physical postulates reflecting the quantum nature of the world.

Gemma De las Cuevas, University of Innsbruck

On the concepts of universality in physics and computer science

A central fact in computer science is that there are universal machines, that is machines that can run any other program. Recently, a somewhat similar notion of universality has been discovered in physics, by which some spin models can simulate all other models.  In this work we shed light on the relation between the two concepts of universality

Matthew Evans, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Gravitational Waves: Discoveries and Future Detectors

Two years ago the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) announced the first direct detection of gravitational waves; minute distortions in space-time caused by cataclysmic events far away in the universe.  Very recently, the merger of a binary neutron star system was detected by both of the Advanced LIGO detectors and the Advanced Virgo detector in Italy, triggering a massive follow-up campaign by ground and space-based telescopes.  A counterpart to the gravitational-wave source was located, and transient emission was detected from gamma rays to radio.  I will talk about the sources of the signals we detected, the physics behind the detectors, and prospects for the future of this emerging field.

Lucien Hardy, Perimeter Institute

Using humans to switch the settings in a Bell experiment

I discuss how we might go about performing a Bell experiment in which humans are used to decide the settings at each end. To get a sufficiently high rate of switching at both ends, I suggest an experiment over a distance of about 100km with 100 people at each end wearing EEG headsets, with the signals from these headsets being used to switch the settings.  The radical possibility we wish to investigate is that, when humans are used to decide the settings (rather than various types of random number generators), we might then expect to see a violation of Quantum Theory in agreement with the relevant Bell inequality. Such a result, while very unlikely, would be tremendously significant for our understanding of the world (and I will discuss some interpretations).  Possible radical implications aside, performing an experiment like this would push the development of new technologies. The biggest problem would be to get sufficiently high rates wherein there has been a human induced switch at each end before a signal as to the new value of the setting could be communicated to the other end and, at the same time, a photon pair is detected. It looks like an experiment like this, while challenging, is just about feasible with current technologies.

Stephan Hartmann, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy

Argumentation, Conditionals, and the Use of Information Theoretic Concepts in Bayesianism

In this talk, I show how information theoretic concepts can be used to extend the scope of traditional Bayesianism. I will focus on the learning of indicative conditionals (“If A, then B”) and a Bayesian account of argumentation. We will see that there are also interesting connections to research done in the psychology of reasoning. The talk is partly based on the paper “Bayesian Argumentation and the Value of Logical Validity” (with Ben Eva, forthcoming in Psychological Review, http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/14491/).

Dominic Horsman, University of Grenoble

When does a physical systems compute: Is physics more or less than computation?

Landauer's famous dictum that 'information is physical' has been enthusiastically taken on by a range of communities, with researchers in areas from quantum and unconventional computing to biology, psychology, and economics adopting the language of information processing. However, this rush to make all science about computing runs the risk of collapsing into triviality: if every physical process is computing, then to say that something performs computation gives no meaningful information about it, leaving computational language devoid of content. In this talk I will give an introduction to Abstraction/Representation Theory, a framework for representing both computing and physical science that allows us to draw a meaningful distinction between them. The use of AR theory - with its commuting-diagrammatic framework and associated algebra of representation - allows us to take significant steps towards giving a formal language and framework for the processes of science. I will show how AR theory represents this process (including the potential for automation), and the insights it gives into the usage and limits of computation as a formal process language for, and description of, physical sciences.

Marcus Hutter, Australian National University

Observer Localization in Multiverse Theories

The progression of theories suggested for our world, from ego- to geo- to helio-centric models to universe and multiverse theories and beyond, shows one tendency: The size of the described worlds increases, with humans being expelled from their center to ever more remote and random locations. If pushed too far, a potential theory of everything (TOE) is actually more a theories of nothing (TON). Indeed such theories have already been developed. I show that including observer localization into such theories is necessary and sufficient to avoid this problem. I develop a quantitative recipe to identify TOEs and distinguish them from TONs and theories in-between. This precisely shows what the problem is with some recently suggested universal TOEs.

Dominik Janzing, Max Planck Institute

Causal inference rules for algorithmic dependences and why they reproduce the arrow of time

The causal Markov condition relates statistical dependences to causality. Its relevance is meanwhile widely appreciated in machine learning, statistics, and physics. I describe the *algorithmic* causal Markov condition relating algorithmic dependences to causality, which can be used for inferring causal relations among single objects without referring to statistics. The underlying postulate "no algorithmic dependence without causal relation" extends Reichenbach's Principle to a probability-free setting. I argue that a related postulate called "algorithmic independence of initial state and dynamics" reproduces the non-decrease of entropy according to the thermodynamic arrow of time.

Markus Mueller, Perimeter Institute & Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna

From observers to physics via algorithmic information theory

Remark to last week's participants: This will be a condensed version of last week's talks. I will drop many details (in particular on the relation to quantum theory) and also drop the introductory slides to algorithmic probability (for this, see Marcus Hutter's introductory talk on Tuesday afternoon, April 10).

Motivated by the conceptual puzzles of quantum theory and related areas of physics, I describe a rigorous and minimal “proof of principle” theory in which observers are fundamental and in which the physical world is a (provably) emergent phenomenon. This is a reversal of the standard view, which holds that physical theories ought to describe the objective evolution of a unique external world, with observers or agents as derived concepts that play no fundamental role whatsoever. Using insights from algorithmic information theory (AIT), I show that this approach admits to address several foundational puzzles that are difficult to address via standard approaches. This includes the measurement and Boltzmann brain problems, and problems related to the computer simulation of observers. Without assuming the existence of an external world from the outset, the resulting theory actually predicts that there is one as a consequence of AIT — in particular, a world with simple, computable, probabilistic laws on which different observers typically (but not always) agree. This approach represents a consistent but highly unfamiliar picture of the world, leading to a new perspective from which to approach some questions in the foundations of physics.

Wayne Myrvold, University of Western Ontario

Can quantum states be understood as Bayesian states of belief?

In accordance with Betteridge's Law of Headlines, the answer to the question in the title is "no." I will argue that the usual norms of Bayesian inference lead the conclusion that quantum states are features of physical reality. The argument will involve both existing $\psi$-ontology results and extension of them that avoids the use of the Cartesian Product Assumption. As the usual norms of Bayesian inference lead to the conclusion of the reality of quantum state, rejecting it requires abandonment of virtually all of Bayesian information theory.  This, I will argue, is unwarranted.

Rüdiger Schack, Royal Holloway University of London

Normative probability in quantum mechanics

In this talk I compare the normative concept of probability at the heart of QBism with the notion of probability implied by the use of Solomonoff induction in Markus Mueller's preprint arXiv:1712.01816.

Tom Sterkenburg, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy

Algorithmic information theory: a critical perspective

Algorithmic information theory (AIT) delivers an objective quantification of simplicity-qua-compressibility,that was employed by Solomonoff (1964) to specify a gold standard of inductive inference. Or so runs the conventional account,that I will challenge in my talk.

Stephan Wolf, Universit della Svizzera italiana

The Logic of Physical Law

Landauer's principle claims that "Information is Physical." Its conceptual antipode, Wheeler's "It from Bit," has since long been popular among computer scientists in the form of the Church-Turing hypothesis: All natural processes can be simulated by a universal Turing machine. Switching back and forth between the two paradigms, motivated by quantum-physical Bell correlations and the doubts they raise about fundamental space-time causality, we look for an intrinsic, physical randomness notion and find one, namely complexity, around the second law of thermodynamics. Bell correlations combined with Kolmogorov complexity in the role of randomness imply an all-or-nothing nature of the Church-Turing hypothesis: Either beyond-Turing computations are physically impossible, or they can be carried out by "devices" as simple as individual photons. This latter result demonstrates in an exemplary way the fruitful interplay between physical and informational-computational principles.

 

 

Friday Apr 13, 2018
Speaker(s): 

Landauer's famous dictum that 'information is physical' has been enthusiastically taken on by a range of communities, with researchers in areas from quantum and unconventional computing to biology, psychology, and economics adopting the language of information processing. However, this rush to make all science about computing runs the risk of collapsing into triviality: if every physical process is computing, then to say that something performs computation gives no meaningful information about it, leaving computational language devoid of content.

Scientific Areas: 
 

 

Friday Apr 13, 2018
Speaker(s): 

In this talk, I show how information theoretic concepts can be used to extend the scope of traditional Bayesianism. I will focus on the learning of indicative conditionals (“If A, then B”) and a Bayesian account of argumentation. We will see that there are also interesting connections to research done in the psychology of reasoning. The talk is partly based on the paper “Bayesian Argumentation and the Value of Logical Validity” (with Ben Eva, forthcoming in Psychological Review, http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/14491/).

Scientific Areas: 
 

 

Thursday Apr 12, 2018
Speaker(s): 

When applied to a physical system, the two main, established notions of information, Shannon Information and Algorithmic Information, explicitly neglect the mechanistic structure of the system under evaluation. Shannon information treats the system as a channel and quantifies correlations between the system’s inputs and outputs, or between its past and future states. Algorithmic information quantifies the length of the shortest program capable of reproducing the system’s outputs or dynamics.

Scientific Areas: 
 

 

Thursday Apr 12, 2018
Speaker(s): 

The causal Markov condition relates statistical dependences to causality. Its relevance is meanwhile widely appreciated in machine learning, statistics, and physics. I describe the *algorithmic* causal Markov condition relating algorithmic dependences to causality, which can be used for inferring causal relations among single objects without referring to statistics. The underlying postulate "no algorithmic dependence without causal relation" extends Reichenbach's Principle to a probability-free setting.

Scientific Areas: 
 

 

Thursday Apr 12, 2018
Speaker(s): 

Remark to last week's participants: This will be a condensed version of last week's talks. I will drop many details (in particular on the relation to quantum theory) and also drop the introductory slides to algorithmic probability (for this, see Marcus Hutter's introductory talk on Tuesday afternoon, April 10).

Scientific Areas: 
 

 

Thursday Apr 12, 2018
Speaker(s): 

The progression of theories suggested for our world, from ego- to geo- to helio-centric models to universe and multiverse theories and beyond, shows one tendency: The size of the described worlds increases, with humans being expelled from their center to ever more remote and random locations. If pushed too far, a potential theory of everything (TOE) is actually more a theories of nothing (TON). Indeed such theories have already been developed. I show that including observer localization into such theories is necessary and sufficient to avoid this problem.

Scientific Areas: 
 

 

Wednesday Apr 11, 2018
Speaker(s): 

In accordance with Betteridge's Law of Headlines, the answer to the question in the title is "no." I will argue that the usual norms of Bayesian inference lead the conclusion that quantum states are features of physical reality. The argument will involve both existing $\psi$-ontology results and extension of them that avoids the use of the Cartesian Product Assumption. As the usual norms of Bayesian inference lead to the conclusion of the reality of quantum state, rejecting it requires abandonment of virtually all of Bayesian information theory. This, I will argue, is unwarranted

Scientific Areas: 
 

 

Wednesday Apr 11, 2018
Speaker(s): 

The progression of theories suggested for our world, from ego- to geo- to helio-centric models to universe and multiverse theories and beyond, shows one tendency: The size of the described worlds increases, with humans being expelled from their center to ever more remote and random locations. If pushed too far, a potential theory of everything (TOE) is actually more a theories of nothing (TON). Indeed such theories have already been developed. I show that including observer localization into such theories is necessary and sufficient to avoid this problem.

Scientific Areas: 
 

 

Wednesday Apr 11, 2018
Speaker(s): 

In this talk I compare the normative concept of probability at the heart of QBism with the notion of probability implied by the use of Solomonoff induction in Markus Mueller's preprint arXiv:1712.01816.

Scientific Areas: 
 

 

Tuesday Apr 10, 2018
Speaker(s): 

Algorithmic information theory (AIT) delivers an objective quantification of simplicity-qua-compressibility,that was employed by Solomonoff (1964) to specify a gold standard of inductive inference. Or so runs the conventional account,that I will challenge in my talk.

Scientific Areas: 

Pages

Scientific Organizers:

  • Michael Cuffaro, Rotman Institute of Philosophy & Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy
  • Markus Mueller, Perimeter Institute & Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information, Vienna
  • Ana Belen Sainz, Perimeter Institute