Seminar • Artificial Intelligence • Physics-based Simulation and Safe Learning-based Control for Robotics
Please note: This seminar will be given online.
Jacopo Panerati, Postdoctoral Fellow
Institute for Aerospace Studies, University of Toronto
Jacopo Panerati, Postdoctoral Fellow
Institute for Aerospace Studies, University of Toronto
Sujaya Maiyya
Computer Science Department
University of California, Santa Barbara
Milind Tambe
Gordon McKay Professor of Computer Science
Director of the Center for Research in Computation and Society, Harvard University
Director, AI for Social Good, Google Research India
Thierry Delisle, PhD candidate
David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science
Supervisor: Professor Peter Buhr
What is the polite way for computer programs to procrastinate?
Postponing work politely means not preventing the progress of others, which requires taking turns letting others make eventual progress. When this happens quickly, there is the illusion of simultaneity and possibly real simultaneity.
Elliot Nelson, Master’s candidate
David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science
Supervisor: Professor Pascal Poupart
Ramnatthan Alagappan, Postdoctoral Researcher
VMware Research Group, VMware
Aishwarya Ganesan, Postdoctoral Researcher
VMware Research Group, VMware
The biosphere, the zone in which life on Earth is found, contains an estimated 10 million multicellular species. But perhaps the most surprising fact about life on Earth is how little we know about its diversity. Only 2 million species are known to science — organisms that have been studied in sufficient detail to at least be described, classified and given a scientific name. With at least another 8 million species yet to be discovered, cataloguing the diversity of life is in many ways a moonshot — a vast endeavour that succeeds by bringing together specialists across many disciplines.
Andrew Tinits, Master’s candidate
David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science
Supervisor: Professor Stephen Mann
Four students at the Cheriton School of Computer Science are recipients of the Computing Research Association’s 2022 Outstanding Undergraduate Researcher Awards. The annual CRA awards program recognizes undergraduate students from universities across North America who have distinguished themselves by conducting exceptional research in an area of computer science.