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Week of Events
Sunday, February 16, 2025
No events on this day.
Monday, February 17, 2025
No events on this day.
Tuesday, February 18, 2025
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February 18, 2025 -MEAM Seminar: “Miniaturized Robots and Probes for Precision Health”
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February 18, 2025 -ESE Spring Seminar – “AI as a Lens: Expanding Vision for Scientific Discovery”
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February 18, 2025 -CIS Seminar: “Efficient Probabilistically Checkable Proofs from High-Dimensional Expanders”
MEAM Seminar: “Miniaturized Robots and Probes for Precision Health”
Designing miniaturized robots and bioelectronic devices will enable access throughout the entire human body, leading to novel procedures at the cellular level and offering localized diagnosis and treatment with unprecedented precision and efficiency. However, the soft, complex, and multi-dimensional nature of biological systems poses significant challenges for mechanical design, manufacturing, materials engineering, and functional integration […]
ESE Spring Seminar – “AI as a Lens: Expanding Vision for Scientific Discovery”
Conventional approaches to scientific discovery often prioritize building larger sensors, gathering more data, and scaling up computational power. In this talk, I will present a complementary perspective: extracting insights hidden in the data we already have. The key lies in using AI not as a black-box predictor, but as a tool for interpreting data through […]
CIS Seminar: “Efficient Probabilistically Checkable Proofs from High-Dimensional Expanders”
The PCP theorem, proved in the 90’s, shows how to encode a proof for any theorem into a format where the theorem's correctness can be verified by making only a constant number of queries to the proof. This result is a significant milestone in computer science and has important implications for approximation algorithms, cryptography, and […]
Wednesday, February 19, 2025
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February 19, 2025 -MEAM Seminar: “Real-Time Safe and Energy-Efficient UAV Motion Planning in Windy Urban Environments”
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February 19, 2025 -ASSET Seminar: “Demystifying the Inner Workings of Language Models”
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February 19, 2025 -Spring 2025 GRASP SFI: Qinghua Liu, Microsoft Research, “When Is Partially Observable Reinforcement Learning Not Scary?”
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February 19, 2025 -CBE & BE Seminar: “Targeting the Brain and Behavior to Probe the Dynamics of Aging” (Claire Bedbrook, Stanford University)
MEAM Seminar: “Real-Time Safe and Energy-Efficient UAV Motion Planning in Windy Urban Environments”
Recent advancements in hardware and software are bringing autonomous aerial vehicles closer than ever to finally delivering on futuristic visions of flying cars and package delivery drones. However, the safe deployment of autonomous aircraft at scale in urban environments poses significant challenges, one of which being uncertainties contributed by complex spatial and temporal winds. Clusters […]
ASSET Seminar: “Demystifying the Inner Workings of Language Models”
Abstract: Large language models (LLMs) power a rapidly-growing and increasingly impactful suite of AI technologies. However, due to their scale and complexity, we lack a fundamental scientific understanding of much of LLMs’ behavior, even when they are open source. The “black-box” nature of LMs not only complicates model debugging and evaluation, but also limits trust […]
Spring 2025 GRASP SFI: Qinghua Liu, Microsoft Research, “When Is Partially Observable Reinforcement Learning Not Scary?”
This will be a hybrid event with in-person attendance in Levine 307 and virtual attendance on Zoom. ABSTRACT Partial observability is ubiquitous in Reinforcement Learning (RL) applications, where agents must make sequential decisions despite lacking complete information about the latent states of the controlled system. Partially observable RL is notoriously challenging in theory—well-known information-theoretic results […]
CBE & BE Seminar: “Targeting the Brain and Behavior to Probe the Dynamics of Aging” (Claire Bedbrook, Stanford University)
Bio & Abstract: Claire Bedbrook is an engineer and neuroscientist working to extend lifespan by modulating the brain. Claire was trained in chemical engineering at the University of California, Berkeley. She completed her Ph.D. in Bioengineering at the California Institute of Technology with Professor Frances Arnold and Professor Viviana Gradinaru, where she engineered molecular tools […]
Thursday, February 20, 2025
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February 20, 2025 -ESE Spring Seminar – “Quantum Simulation of Electronic Materials with a Superconducting Qubit Array”
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February 20, 2025 -IDEAS/STAT Optimization Seminar: “Theoretical foundations for multi-agent learning”
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February 20, 2025 -CIS Seminar: “Learning Theoretic Foundations for Modern (Data) Science”
ESE Spring Seminar – “Quantum Simulation of Electronic Materials with a Superconducting Qubit Array”
Arrays of coupled superconducting qubits are a compelling platform for analog quantum simulations of solid-state matter and many-body physics. These devices natively emulate the Bose-Hubbard model while offering a high degree of control, fast operation rates, and site-resolved readout. We discuss recent experiments using a 4-by-4 array of transmon qubits. By adopting a parametric coupling […]
IDEAS/STAT Optimization Seminar: “Theoretical foundations for multi-agent learning”
As learning algorithms become increasingly capable of acting autonomously, it is important to better understand the behavior that results from their interactions. For example, a pervasive challenge in multi-agent learning settings, which spans both theory and practice and dates back decades, has been the failure of convergence for iterative algorithms such as gradient descent. Accordingly, […]
CIS Seminar: “Learning Theoretic Foundations for Modern (Data) Science”
In this talk, I will explain how fundamental problems in computational learning theory are at the heart of modern problems in machine learning and scientific applications and how algorithmic insights in mathematically tractable models can inspire new solutions in a wide variety of domains. I will explore two directions. First, I will explore algorithmic foundations […]
Friday, February 21, 2025
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February 21, 2025 -GRASP Industry Talk: Honda Research Institute, “Working with Imperfect Prediction on Autonomous Vehicles”
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February 21, 2025 -PICS Colloquium: Unraveling Internal Friction in a Coarse-Grained Protein Model
GRASP Industry Talk: Honda Research Institute, “Working with Imperfect Prediction on Autonomous Vehicles”
This will be a hybrid event with in-person attendance in Wu and Chen and virtual attendance on Zoom. This seminar will NOT be recorded. ABSTRACT State of the art prediction can fail catastrophically when operating outside of the training distribution. We show methods that can be used to reduce these failures. We then outline how […]
PICS Colloquium: Unraveling Internal Friction in a Coarse-Grained Protein Model
Understanding the dynamic behavior of complex biomolecules requires simplified models that not only make computations feasible but also reveal fundamental mechanisms. Coarse-graining (CG) achieves this by grouping atoms into beads, whose stochastic dynamics can be derived using the Mori-Zwanzig formalism, capturing both reversible and irreversible interactions. In liquid, the dissipative bead-bead interactions have so far […]
Saturday, February 22, 2025
No events on this day.
