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Events for March 24, 2022

  • ECE-EP Seminar - Dejan Markovic, Thursday, March 24th at 10am in EEB 248 & via Zoom

    Thu, Mar 24, 2022 @ 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM

    Ming Hsieh Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

    Conferences, Lectures, & Seminars


    Speaker: Dejan Markovic, UCLA

    Talk Title: The Future of Computing and Neuromodulation

    Abstract: This talk will discuss future technologies addressing unmet needs in science, medicine, and engineering. Data-driven attentive computing requires runtime flexible and efficient hardware and software. Simple hardware leads to complex software (e.g. FPGA) and simple software leads to complex hardware (e.g. CPU). Runtime reconfigurable arrays (RTRAs) balance hardware and software to enable spatial and temporal flexibility for dynamic or uncertain environments. RTRA features multi-program tenancy, multi-size compile, and priority handling for >100x compute capacity gains over FPGA, and within 5x of (inflexible) hardware accelerators, as shown on a blind signal classification use case. Medical implants also require efficiency and flexibility, with heavily constrained size, weight and power, for novel clinical research and therapeutic systems. Despite notable clinical successes (e.g. Parkinson's disease), limitations in existing devices prevent them from expanding to other indications such as mental health or Alzheimer's disease. I will discuss the Neuro-stack, a versatile closed-loop system, verified in human subject experiments, towards miniaturized neural duplex of the future. These applications also reveal opportunities in system-level design automation to address design productivity and system assembly challenges.

    Biography: Dejan Marković is a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He is also affiliated with UCLA Bioengineering Department, Neuroengineering field. He completed the Ph.D. degree in 2006 at the University of California, Berkeley, for which he was awarded 2007 David J. Sakrison Memorial Prize. His current research is focused on implantable neuromodulation systems, domain-specific compute architectures, and design methodologies. Dr. Marković co-founded Flex Logix Technologies, a semiconductor IP startup, in 2014, and helped build foundational technology of Ceribell, a medical device startup. He received an NSF CAREER Award in 2009. In 2010, he was a co-recipient of ISSCC Jack Raper Award for Outstanding Technology Directions. He also received 2014 ISSCC Lewis Winner Award for Outstanding Paper. Prof. Markovic is a Fellow of the IEEE.

    Host: ECE-Electrophysics

    More Information: Dejan Markovic Flyer.pdf

    Location: Hughes Aircraft Electrical Engineering Center (EEB) - 248

    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    Contact: Marilyn Poplawski

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  • CS Colloquium: Tesca Fitzgerald (Carnegie Mellon University) - Learning to address novel situations through human-robot collaboration

    Thu, Mar 24, 2022 @ 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM

    Thomas Lord Department of Computer Science

    Conferences, Lectures, & Seminars


    Speaker: Tesca Fitzgerald, Carnegie Mellon University

    Talk Title: Learning to address novel situations through human-robot collaboration

    Series: CS Colloquium

    Abstract: As our expectations for robots' adaptive capacities grow, it will be increasingly important for them to reason about the novel objects, tasks, and interactions inherent to everyday life. Rather than attempt to pre-train a robot for all potential task variations it may encounter, we can develop more capable and robust robots by assuming they will inevitably encounter situations that they are initially unprepared to address. My work enables a robot to address these novel situations by learning from a human teacher's domain knowledge of the task, such as the contextual use of an object or tool. Meeting this challenge requires robots to be flexible not only to novelty, but to different forms of novelty and their varying effects on the robot's task completion. In this talk, I will focus on (1) the implications of novelty, and its various causes, on the robot's learning goals, (2) methods for structuring its interaction with the human teacher in order to meet those learning goals, and (3) modeling and learning from interaction-derived training data to address novelty.

    This lecture satisfies requirements for CSCI 591: Research Colloquium

    Biography: Dr. Tesca Fitzgerald is a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Robotics Institute at Carnegie Mellon University. Her research is centered around interactive robot learning, with the aim of developing robots that are adaptive, robust, and collaborative when faced with novel situations. Before joining Carnegie Mellon, Dr. Fitzgerald received her PhD in Computer Science at Georgia Tech and completed her B.Sc at Portland State University. She is an NSF Graduate Research Fellow (2014), Microsoft Graduate Women Scholar (2014), and IBM Ph.D. Fellow (2017).


    www.tescafitzgerald.com


    Host: Heather Culbertson

    Location: Olin Hall of Engineering (OHE) - 132

    Audiences: By invitation only.

    Contact: Assistant to CS chair

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  • Cognizant Information Session - Full Time & Internship Opportunities (Virtual)

    Thu, Mar 24, 2022 @ 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM

    Viterbi School of Engineering Career Connections

    Workshops & Infosessions


    Cognizant Information Session - Full Time & Internship Opportunities (Virtual)

    Thursday, March 24, 2022
    11am - 12pm

    Are you ready to start a career journey in IT and professional services?

    Meet our recruiters, learn about Cognizant and the exciting opportunities for current/recent university graduates.
    Cognizant is looking for driven, collaborative, and highly motivated individuals to join us. We currently have full time (Technology & Consulting) and internship opportunities for Juniors and Seniors.

    Register now to learn more about Cognizant.
    sign up link: https://app.jigsawinteractive.com/u/LSx2D4



    External employer-hosted events and activities are not affiliated with the USC Viterbi Career Connections Office. They are posted on Viterbi Career Connections because they may be of interest to members of the Viterbi community. Inclusion of any activity does not indicate USC sponsorship or endorsement of that activity or event. It is the participants' responsibility to apply due diligence, exercise caution when participating, and report concerns to vcareers@usc.edu

    Location: Virtual

    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    Contact: RTH 218 Viterbi Career Connections

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  • Repeating EventVirtual First-Year Admission Information Session

    Thu, Mar 24, 2022 @ 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM

    Viterbi School of Engineering Undergraduate Admission

    Workshops & Infosessions


    Our virtual information session is a live presentation from a USC Viterbi admission counselor designed for high school students and their family members to learn more about the USC Viterbi undergraduate experience. Our session will cover an overview of our undergraduate engineering programs, the application process, and more on student life. Guests will be able to ask questions and engage in further discussion toward the end of the session.

    Register Here!



    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    View All Dates

    Contact: Viterbi Admission

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  • CS Colloquium: Seo Jin Park (MIT CSAIL) - Towards Interactive Big Data Processing Through Flash Burst Parallel Systems

    Thu, Mar 24, 2022 @ 02:00 PM - 03:00 PM

    Thomas Lord Department of Computer Science

    Conferences, Lectures, & Seminars


    Speaker: Seo Jin Park , MIT CSAIL

    Talk Title: Towards Interactive Big Data Processing Through Flash Burst Parallel Systems

    Series: CS Colloquium

    Abstract: Today, many organizations store big data on the cloud and lease relatively small clusters of instances to run analytics queries, train machine learning models, and more. However, the exponential data growth, combined with the slowdown of Moore's law, makes it challenging (if not impossible) to run such big data processing tasks in real-time. Most applications run big data workloads on timescales of several minutes or hours and resort to complex, application-specific optimizations to reduce the amount of data processing required for interactive queries. This design pattern hurts developer productivity and restricts the scope of applications that can use big data. However, as we have many servers in a cloud datacenter, a natural question is "can we borrow thousands of servers briefly to accelerate big data processing enough to be interactive?"

    In this talk, I'll share my vision to enable massively parallel data processing even for very short-duration (1-10 ms), which I call "flash bursts." This will empower interactive, real-time applications (e.g., cyber security attack defense, self-driving cars or drones, etc) to utilize much larger data than before. For this moonshot, I take a two-pronged approach. First, I restructure important big data applications (analytics and DNN training) so that they can run efficiently in a flash burst fashion. On this prong, the talk will focus on how I efficiently scaled distributed sorting to 100+ servers even for a 1-millisecond time budget. Second, I rebuild various layers in distributed systems to reduce overheads of flash burst scaling. On this prong, I will focus on how I removed the overheads of consistent replication.

    This lecture satisfies requirements for CSCI 591: Research Colloquium


    Biography: Seo Jin Park is a postdoctoral researcher at MIT CSAIL. He received a Ph.D. in Computer Science from Stanford University in 2019, advised by John Ousterhout. He is broadly interested in distributed systems, focusing on low-latency systems: scaling low-latency data processing, optimizing consensus protocols (both standard and byzantine), suppressing tail-latencies, and building efficient performance debugging tools. His Ph.D. study was supported by Samsung Scholarship.

    Host: Barath Raghavan

    Location: Michelson Center for Convergent Bioscience (MCB) - 101

    Audiences: By invitation only.

    Contact: Assistant to CS chair

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  • Mork Family Department Seminar - Jason Bates

    Thu, Mar 24, 2022 @ 04:00 PM - 05:20 PM

    Mork Family Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science

    Conferences, Lectures, & Seminars


    Speaker: Jason Bates, University of Wisconsin-Madison

    Talk Title: Catalysis beyond the binding site: reactions on crowded surfaces and in packed pores

    Host: Professor A.Hodge

    Location: Kaprielian Hall (KAP) - 147

    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    Contact: Heather Alexander

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  • CS Colloquium: Feras Saad (MIT) - Scalable Structure Learning and Inference via Probabilistic Programming

    Thu, Mar 24, 2022 @ 04:00 PM - 05:00 PM

    Thomas Lord Department of Computer Science

    Conferences, Lectures, & Seminars


    Speaker: Feras Saad, MIT

    Talk Title: Scalable Structure Learning and Inference via Probabilistic Programming

    Series: CS Colloquium

    Abstract: Probabilistic programming supports probabilistic modeling, learning, and inference by representing sophisticated probabilistic models as computer programs in new programming languages. This talk presents efficient probabilistic programming-based techniques that address two fundamental challenges in scaling and automating structure learning and inference over complex data.

    First, I will describe scalable structure learning methods that make it possible to automatically synthesize probabilistic programs in an online setting by performing Bayesian inference over hierarchies of flexibly structured symbolic program representations, for discovering models of time series data, tabular data, and relational data. Second, I will present fast compilers and symbolic analyses that compute exact answers to a broad range of inference queries about these learned programs, which lets us extract interpretable patterns and make accurate predictions in real time.

    I will demonstrate how these techniques deliver state-of-the-art performance in terms of runtime, accuracy, robustness, and programmability by drawing on several examples from real-world applications, which include adapting to extreme novelty in economic time series, online forecasting of flu rates given sparse multivariate observations, discovering stochastic motion models of zebrafish hunting, and verifying the fairness of machine learning classifiers.

    This lecture satisfies requirements for CSCI 591: Research Colloquium


    Biography: Feras Saad is a PhD candidate in Computer Science at MIT working at the intersection of programming languages, probabilistic machine learning, and computational statistics. His research is accompanied with a collection of popular open-source probabilistic programming systems used by collaborators at Intel, Takeda, Liberty Mutual, IBM, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation for practical applications of structure learning and probabilistic inference. Feras' MEng thesis on probabilistic programming and data science has been recognized with the 1st Place Computer Science Thesis Award at MIT.

    Host: Mukund Raghothaman

    Location: Ronald Tutor Hall of Engineering (RTH) - 105

    Audiences: By invitation only.

    Contact: Assistant to CS chair

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  • Meet Visa: Crypto Development Program (Virtual)

    Thu, Mar 24, 2022 @ 04:00 PM - 05:00 PM

    Viterbi School of Engineering Career Connections

    Workshops & Infosessions


    RSVP HERE: https://www.wayup.com/i-Technology-j-Meet-Visa-Crypto-Development-Program-Visa-801319635388880/?utm_source=direct&utm_medium=vepromotion&utm_campaign=Visa&refer=visref_VE-Crypto-Development-Program-March-28179244


    Join Cuy Sheffield (VP Crypto at Visa) and Alex Chiang (Sr. Manager, Crypto Strategy) for a discussion on Visa's Crypto Development Program opportunity, learn about exciting opportunities and programs in crypto and tips to prepare for a career in crypto!

    The Crypto Development Program is an 18-month rotational development experience designed to build a fully fluent cryptocurrency team now and for the future. You will enjoy three distinct business rotations that provide you with practical experience of different areas within the emerging cryptocurrency ecosystem at Visa. These are Crypto Product, Crypto Solutions, and Digital Partnerships. The program supports Visa's mission to build a strong entry level pipeline of talent with deep subject matter expertise in the Crypto space. In addition to meaningful rotations, Associates are given training & development, mentoring, networking and leadership exposure.
    Can't wait to see you there!
    (Please note: In order to qualify, candidates must currently be completing a Bachelor's degree program and graduate between December 2021 - August 2022. Permanent authorization to work in the U.S. is a precondition of employment for this position. Visa will not sponsor applicants for work visas in connection with this position.)

    About Us:
    Visa is a payments technology company. The beating heart of our company is VisaNet, our global processing network that enables digital payments to happen securely and reliably in the blink of an eye. Our mission is to connect the world through the most innovative, reliable and secure payments network-enabling individuals, businesses and economies to thrive.




    External employer-hosted events and activities are not affiliated with the USC Viterbi Career Connections Office. They are posted on Viterbi Career Connections because they may be of interest to members of the Viterbi community. Inclusion of any activity does not indicate USC sponsorship or endorsement of that activity or event. It is the participant's responsibility to apply due diligence, exercise caution when participating, and report concerns to vcareers@usc.edu

    Location: Virtual

    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    Contact: RTH 218 Viterbi Career Connections

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  • GRIDS Talk: Bridging the Gap Between Analyst and Business Types

    Thu, Mar 24, 2022 @ 07:30 PM - 08:30 PM

    Viterbi School of Engineering Career Connections

    Workshops & Infosessions


    Date:Thursday, March 24
    Time: 7:30pm
    Location: Virtual
    Sign Up: https://forms.gle/qn74h13BZD4gRNzT6

    With 10 years in the analytics industry in both B2B and B2C businesses like Dollar Shave Club, Workfront and Adobe, Brett Kobold will discuss important lessons he has learned in advancing his career. In this GRIDS Talk, analyst-types will learn techniques to translate the complexity of data analysis into tangible results while business/strategy types will learn how to communicate with analyst-types in order to get the best results. Walking out of this presentation you will have a better understanding how to work with both sides of this complex ecosystem.

    Sign up here to receive the Zoom link!

    External employer-hosted events and activities are not affiliated with the USC Viterbi Career Connections Office. They are posted on Viterbi Career Connections because they may be of interest to members of the Viterbi community. Inclusion of any activity does not indicate USC sponsorship or endorsement of that activity or event. It is the participant's responsibility to apply due diligence, exercise caution when participating, and report concerns to vcareers@usc.edu

    Location: Virtual

    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    Contact: RTH 218 Viterbi Career Connections

    OutlookiCal