Kalender
Diputas: Julien-Pooyah Weihs: "Investigating understanding, knowledge, and conceptual difficulties using graph network analysis"
Hva betyr det egentlig å 'forstå' naturvitenskap?
Julien-Pooya Weihs disputerer 23.3.2026 for ph.d.-graden ved Universitetet i Bergen med avhandlingen "Investigating understanding, knowledge, and conceptual difficulties using graph network analysis".
Stormtracks group meeting
Hi everyone,
We’ll have our Stormtracks group meeting this Wednesday (25.03) from 14:00 to 15:00 at Skybar (BCCR 3180). This week Mari will give a talk on Comparison of cloud properties during a marine cold air outbreak in two convection permitting numerical weather prediction models.
The meeting will be hybrid and you can join remotely via Zoom: https://uib.zoom.us/j/62886269543?pwd=ajWbi97zr0hbniaoQdZkUtD2EUSSri.1
Meeting ID: 628 8626 9543 | Password: qSKTfKU3
The meeting schedule for this semester is in the following google doc: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1F9hy45DSeS9qrXl-3l4cNzCPSE9OuBBVqdCu3VY240U/edit?usp=sharing
See you all there! :)
Cheers,
Birgit and Yangfan
Ocean science bar: Arctic Sea Ice - the big picture and the small cracks
Arctic sea ice is shrinking fast, reshaping the Arctic Ocean and its role in the global climate system. As the ice retreats and changes character, its influence on ecosystems and societies is shifting in ways we are only beginning to grasp. In this event, three researchers will show how climate prediction and sea‑ice modelling shed light on what the Arctic of tomorrow may look like.
Read more about the event here: Arctic Sea Ice – the big picture and the small cracks | Ocean | UiB
Free and open for all!
Photo: Colourbox
Workshop on Self-Organizing Maps
Dear all,
Mark Seefeldt from the University of Colorado - Boulder who is in Bergen for the spring as a visiting Fulbright Scholar kindly invites you to a workshop or short tutorial on Self-Organising Maps. A brief description of which is below, and the key details are:
When: Wednesday, April 8, 12:30-1:45 PM
Where: BCCR - Undervisningsrom 4020
Please send an email to Mark Seefeldt (mark.seefeldt@colorado.edu) if you would like to download the slides prior to the workshop. Or if you have any questions.
Kind regards,
Priscilla
Workshop Description
The method of Self-organizing maps (SOMs) is an artificial neural network data analysis technique that objectively stratifies large volumes of data into a smaller number of recurring patterns on a physically meaningful basis. SOMs have been used for the past 20+ years in the atmospheric and climate sciences identifying patterns in sea-level pressure, winds, relative humidity, and vertical profiles of potential temperature, to name a few applications. This workshop will provide an introduction to the application of SOMs in atmospheric and climate sciences by providing an overview of SOMs, a description of what is done during SOM training, and reviewing two common methods to create SOMs and corresponding analyses. Throughout the presentation there will be a variety examples provided showing the different ways in which SOMs have been applied to atmospheric and climate sciences.
Bjerknes Proposal Writing Workshop From idea to project: Writing successful project proposals
Bjerknes Proposal Writing Workshop 2026
From idea to project: Writing successful project proposals
19.05.2026: 9:00 – 16:00
20.05.2026: 9:00 – 15:30
Registration deadline: 24.04.2026
Link for registration: Bjerknes Proposal Writing Workshop 2026 – Fill out form
Venue: UiB Læringsarena, Nygårdsgaten 5, Bergen
Workshop leaders: Friederike U. Hoffmann, Research coordinator at GFI and EU expert evaluator; Nadine Goris, Researcher and Research Adviser at NORCE; Catherine Downy, Research Coordinator at NERSC
Credit point: 1 (ECTS)
Maximum number of participants: 15
For questions, please contact Friederike.Hoffmann@uib.no
The target group is early career scientists (postdocs, early career researchers, PhDs) in climate sciences with little or no experience in proposal writing. The workshop targets both those who already have a concrete project idea and a plan to submit a proposal, and those who want to gain general proposal writing and project development skills.
The workshop will enable you to apply for external funding for your own research. You will obtain the necessary skills through a mix of short lectures, group work, and plenary presentations, during which the research ideas of 3 participants will be developed into proposal concepts.
You will learn about:
the central elements of a project proposal
how successful research proposals are developed, structured, and presented
the most relevant funding opportunities for early career scientists
You will learn how to:
present a project idea briefly and concisely (pitching)
develop the central components of a research proposal
structure these components into a convincing project concept
draft a project budget
In case the workshop is overbooked, Bjerknes members and scientists with own project ideas will be prioritized. For PhD students: this workshop makes the most sense if you are in the 3rd (or 4th) year of your PhD. PhD students in their 1st or 2nd year will not be prioritized.
References:
General information about the workshop: Proposal writing training at Bjerknes Center
Publication about the course concept: Proposal Writing Training and Idea Development for Early‐Career Researchers Based on Constructive Alignment, Co‐Creation and Active Learning Strategies - Hoffmann - 2025 - Ecology and Evolution - Wiley Online Library
Polar research group meeting
Topic: Modeling the Polar regions - what do we have and what are we missing?
Workshop on Technological Advances in Climate Modelling – Bergen, June 15-19, 2026
More info will be posted.
Bjerknes Annual Meeting (BAM) 2026
Save the dates!






