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Events for January 29, 2016

  • W.V.T. Rusch Engineering Honors Program Colloquium

    Fri, Jan 29, 2016 @ 01:00 PM - 01:50 PM

    USC Viterbi School of Engineering, Viterbi School of Engineering Student Affairs

    University Calendar


    Join us for a presentation by Michael Hiltzik, from the Los Angeles Times, titled "Big Science: Ernest Lawrence and the Invention that Launched the Military-Industrial Complex."

    Location: Seeley G. Mudd Building (SGM) - 123

    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    Contact: Ramon Borunda/Academic Services

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  • EE-EP Seminar - Zheshen Zhang, Friday, January 29th at 2:00pm in EEB 132

    Fri, Jan 29, 2016 @ 02:00 PM - 03:30 PM

    Ming Hsieh Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

    Conferences, Lectures, & Seminars


    Speaker: Zheshen Zhang, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Talk Title: High-Rate Quantum-Secured Communication

    Abstract: The advent of quantum computers will doom public-key cryptography's RSA encryption standard. Quantum key distribution (QKD), however, offers a solution for the post-RSA era: quantum physics' no-cloning theorem can ensure safe creation of one-time pads that permit communication with full information-theoretic security. Prevailing QKD protocols use one-photon-per-bit encoding to be protected by the no-cloning theorem. Propagation loss in long-distance transmission then dramatically reduces their received photon flux, and thus limits their secret-key rates to far less than what will be needed for one-time pad encryption of large files. In this talk, I introduce floodlight quantum-secured communication (FL-QSC), a radically different paradigm that thrives by breaking QKD's one-photon-per-bit barrier. FL-QSC employs many photons per bit, so that propagation loss is mitigated. In addition, it uses a huge number of low-brightness optical modes per bit, to maintain the protection afforded by the no-cloning theorem. We show that no-cloning, plus photon-coincidence channel monitoring, makes the new protocol capable of a 2 Gb/s secret-key rate over a 50-km fiber link. Our initial proof-of-concept experiment, done with 10-dB propagation loss (equivalent to a 50-km fiber link), demonstrated a 52 Mb/s secret-key rate against the optimum collective Gaussian attack. This rate is already a two-orders-of-magnitude improvement over all existing QKD demonstrations. Moreover, FL-QSC could be pushed to the long-sought Gb/s secret-key rates with available equipment, i.e., no new technology need be developed.

    Biography: Zheshen Zhang is a Research Scientist in the Research Laboratory of Electronics at MIT. He received the B.S. degree in Electrical Engineering from Shanghai Jiao Tong University in June 2006 and the Ph.D. degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology in December 2011. He joined MIT in March 2012 as a Postdoctoral Associate. Dr. Zhang's research covers a wide swath of the theoretical and experimental aspects of quantum communications, quantum sensing, and novel materials for scalable quantum information processing platforms.


    Host: EE-EP

    Location: Hughes Aircraft Electrical Engineering Center (EEB) - 132

    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    Contact: Marilyn Poplawski

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  • NL Seminar-Leveraging the Social Web to Enable Open-Domain Interactive Storytelling

    Fri, Jan 29, 2016 @ 03:00 PM - 04:00 PM

    Information Sciences Institute

    Conferences, Lectures, & Seminars


    Speaker: Reid Swanson, USC/ICT

    Talk Title: Leveraging the Social Web to Enable Open-Domain Interactive Storytelling

    Series: Natural Language Seminar

    Abstract: Storytelling is an integral part of human interaction and critical to nearly all forms of entertainment. Since the introduction of TALE-SPIN over thirty years ago, automating the process of storytelling has been an active area of research. However, despite the incredible advances in other areas of computer science, such as 3D graphics and computational physics, that have enabled dazzling immersive interactive environments, there has been little progress in delivering automated *stories* that have the richness and complexity we expect in this genre of discourse.

    In this talk I will primarily discuss work done during my thesis that leverages the vast amounts of knowledge hidden implicitly in the social web in order to enable a text-based open-domain interactive storytelling system. In this system the human and computer take turns writing sentences of an emerging fictional story on any topic the author chooses. The system uses an architecture inspired by case-based reasoning with a knowledge base of over a million personal stories about the daily lives and experiences of ordinary people. At each turn the system selects a sentence from the corpus that tries to maximize the semantic and discourse coherence given the text of the story so far.

    I will also describe how crowd-sourcing communities were used to collect thousands of collaborative stories with the system and tens of thousands of ratings from hundreds of participants on several subjective evaluation criteria. The best models show significant improvements over the baseline and are judged to be indistinguishable from entirely human written weblog stories from a held out part of the collection.

    I will conclude with some more recent and ongoing research that examines additional methods of evaluation and new models of narrative generation based on Recurrent Neural Networks.



    Biography: Reid Swanson received his PhD in Computer Science from the University of Southern California in 2010 where he focused on a large-scale text-based interactive storytelling system. His primary research interest is in large-scale open-domain interpretation and generation of interactive narratives.

    After graduating he spent a year at the Walt Disney Imagineering Research & Development lab in Glendale, CA. At Disney he worked with an interdisciplinary team of industry engineers, academics, artists and performers to develop technologies for bringing persistent interactive storytelling to select groups of guests at their theme parks and resorts.

    From 2011 until 2015, Reid worked as a postdoc at UC Santa Cruz where he participated in a range of different projects. As part of the SIREN project, with Arnav Jhala, he investigated games for teaching conflict resolution management. On the SSIM project, with Michael Mateas, he helped research and develop virtual training environments targeting the military and law enforcement agencies to help prevent conflict escalation in unknown social environments. With Marilyn Walker, he also investigated automated methods for analyzing and mining prototypical arguments on internet debate forums about controversial topics such as gun control, gay marriage and evolution.

    In August of 2015 he rejoined the Institute of Technologies as a Research Scientist where he is researching the role of narrative structure in the persuasiveness of an intended message embedded in the story across different cultures.

    Host: Xing Shi and Kevin Knight

    More Info: http://nlg.isi.edu/nl-seminar/

    Location: Information Science Institute (ISI) - 6th Flr Conf Rm # 689, Marina Del Rey

    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    Contact: Peter Zamar

    Event Link: http://nlg.isi.edu/nl-seminar/

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