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Week of Events
Sunday, March 23, 2025
No events on this day.
Monday, March 24, 2025
No events on this day.
Tuesday, March 25, 2025
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March 25, 2025 -MEAM Seminar: “Multiscale and Multi-physics Mechanics Involving Highly Flexible Nano and Continuum Rods”
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March 25, 2025 -ESE Spring Seminar – “Engineering and utilizing interactions between spins and light with molecular qubits”
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March 25, 2025 -CIS Seminar presents: ” Cyber-Physical Security Through the Lens of AI-Enabled Systems
MEAM Seminar: “Multiscale and Multi-physics Mechanics Involving Highly Flexible Nano and Continuum Rods”
Flexible rod-like structures such as nanotubes and nanowires have found significant interest in nanoelectronic applications. Likewise, with the recent advancement in soft robotics and additive manufacturing, an important goal is to optimally design architected slender metamaterials and further derive their effective mechanical properties through homogenization techniques. However, modeling such structures as a flexible continuum body […]
ESE Spring Seminar – “Engineering and utilizing interactions between spins and light with molecular qubits”
Coupling of spins and light can enable photon-mediated scaling and control in quantum technologies, as demonstrated in trapped atom, ion, and solid-state spin qubits. Molecular analogs of such systems hold promise as a nascent qubit platform that can leverage the tools of synthetic chemistry to tailor quantum properties and integrate in nanoscale devices but have […]
CIS Seminar presents: ” Cyber-Physical Security Through the Lens of AI-Enabled Systems
Cyber-physical systems (CPS), powered by emerging artificial intelligence (AI) technologies, have become integral to various critical domains such as the Internet of Things (IoTs), medical devices, and autonomous vehicles. A unique aspect of these systems lies in their interactions with the physical world, by perceiving environments through heterogeneous modalities (perception), processing digital data with intelligence […]
Wednesday, March 26, 2025
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March 26, 2025 -ASSET Seminar: “Controlling Language Models”
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March 26, 2025 -Spring 2025 GRASP SFI: Danna Ma, Cornell University, “Harnessing Physical Intelligence for Collective Motion in Robotic Matter”
ASSET Seminar: “Controlling Language Models”
Abstract: Controlling language models is key to unlocking their full potential and making them useful for downstream tasks. Successfully deploying these models often requires both task-specific customization and rigorous auditing of their behavior. In this talk, I will begin by introducing a customization method called Prefix-Tuning, which adapts language models by updating only 0.1% of […]
Spring 2025 GRASP SFI: Danna Ma, Cornell University, “Harnessing Physical Intelligence for Collective Motion in Robotic Matter”
This will be a hybrid event with in-person attendance in Levine 307 and virtual attendance on Zoom. ABSTRACT In recent years, the field of swarm robotics has seen rapid advancements, from research to industry. While most work focuses on programmed intelligence, swarms in nature demonstrate that physical intelligence—where agents perform tasks based on their morphology […]
Thursday, March 27, 2025
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March 27, 2025 -ESE Spring Seminar – “Wavelength-Encoded Nanolaser Particles for Highly Multiplexed Single-Cell Analysis”
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March 27, 2025 -IDEAS/STAT Optimization Seminar: “The Size of Teachers as a Measure of Data Complexity: PAC-Bayes Excess Risk Bounds and Scaling Laws”
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March 27, 2025 -CIS Seminar: “Unlocking Scalable Robot Learning in the Real World”
ESE Spring Seminar – “Wavelength-Encoded Nanolaser Particles for Highly Multiplexed Single-Cell Analysis”
Understanding single-cell heterogeneity in biological systems is considered the holy grail of biomedicine. However, conventional single-cell analysis methods are constrained by the destructive readout process of DNA barcodes and the broad emission linewidths of fluorescence barcodes, limiting their ability to capture dynamic information and achieve high multiplexing capabilities. This seminar explores the transformative potential of […]
IDEAS/STAT Optimization Seminar: “The Size of Teachers as a Measure of Data Complexity: PAC-Bayes Excess Risk Bounds and Scaling Laws”
Zoom link: https://upenn.zoom.us/j/98220304722 Abstract: We study the generalization properties of neural networks through the lens of data complexity. Recent work by Buzaglo et al. (2024) shows that random (nearly) interpolating networks generalize, provided there is a small ``teacher'' network that achieves small excess risk. We give a short single-sample PAC-Bayes proof of this result and […]
CIS Seminar: “Unlocking Scalable Robot Learning in the Real World”
Many domains of machine learning, from language modeling to computer vision, have recently undergone a shift towards generalist models, whose broad generalization abilities are fueled by large and diverse real-world training datasets and high-capacity model architectures. In robotics, however, it has been challenging to apply the same recipe: after all, we cannot easily scrape millions […]
Friday, March 28, 2025
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March 28, 2025 -CIS Seminar: “Learning to Perceive the 4D World”
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March 28, 2025 -CIS Seminar: “Pareto-efficient AI systems: Expanding the quality and efficiency frontier of AI”
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March 28, 2025 -Spring 2025 GRASP on Robotics: Mac Schwager, Stanford University, “Perception-Rich Robot Autonomy with Neural Environment Models”
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March 28, 2025 -CBE Doctoral Dissertation Defense: “Computational Materials Design for Exerting Control over Ice Formation” (Zachariah Vicars)
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March 28, 2025 -Celebration of Community
CIS Seminar: “Learning to Perceive the 4D World”
Perceiving the 4D world (i.e., 3D space over time) from visual input is essential for human interaction with the physical environment. While computer vision has made remarkable progress in 3D scene understanding, much of it remains piecemeal—for example, focusing solely on static scenes or specific categories of dynamic objects. How can we model diverse dynamic […]
CIS Seminar: “Pareto-efficient AI systems: Expanding the quality and efficiency frontier of AI”
We have made exciting progress in AI by massive models on massive amounts of data center compute. However, the demands for AI are rapidly expanding. I identify how to maximize performance under any compute constraint, expanding the Pareto frontier of AI capabilities. This talk builds up to an efficient language model architecture that expands […]
Spring 2025 GRASP on Robotics: Mac Schwager, Stanford University, “Perception-Rich Robot Autonomy with Neural Environment Models”
This will be a hybrid event with in-person attendance in Wu and Chen and virtual attendance on Zoom. ABSTRACT Recent advances in computer vision have led to the rise of highly expressive 3D scene models such as NeRFs and GSplats. More than just rendering lifelike images, these models allow robots to ground visual, semantic, physical, […]
CBE Doctoral Dissertation Defense: “Computational Materials Design for Exerting Control over Ice Formation” (Zachariah Vicars)
Abstract: Ice formation plays an important role in a wide range of contexts, from serving as nuclei for clouds in the upper atmosphere to forming on the surfaces of aircraft and ships, reducing their performance. Controlling the formation of ice using additives or novel coatings has, consequently, been a long-standing pursuit in materials science. Here, […]
Celebration of Community
The Cora Ingrum Center for Community and Outreach is planning its annual Celebration of Community gala to showcase Penn Engineering students, staff, and faculty in their multi-talented richness. The event will consist of guest speakers, performances, presentations from student groups, and a variety of cuisines. Do not hesitate to contact Dr. Ocek Eke (ocek@seas.upenn.edu) and […]
Saturday, March 29, 2025
No events on this day.
