International Love Data Week is a global event dedicated to celebrating data in all its forms. This year, Stony Brook University is excited to celebrate Love Data Week with a series of 30-minute webinars aimed to promote proficiency with data, showcase innovative data projects, and foster a community of data enthusiasts across campus. Hosted by the Division of Educational & Institutional Effectiveness and facilitated by the Office of Educational Effectiveness, we invite all SBU faculty, staff and students to join in the festivities, learn from colleagues in our campus community, and fall in love with the power of data! Learn more here. |
Bio: Oliver Kennedy is an associate professor at the University at Buffalo. He earned his PhD from Cornell University in 2011 and now leads the Online Data Interactions (ODIn) lab, which operates at the intersection of databases and programming languages. Oliver is the recipient of an NSF CAREER award, an IEEE Region 1 Technological Innovation Award, UB's Exceptional Scholar Award, and several UB SEAS teaching awards. Oliver is also one of the founding board members of Breadcrumb Analytics. Several of Oliver's papers have been invited to Best of compilations from SIGMOD and VLDB. The ODIn lab is currently exploring (i) how we can leverage database techniques like incremental view maintenance to make compilers faster, (ii) how to make it easier for data scientists to track how sources of uncertainty, ambiguity, and/or bias affect analyses, and (iii) how to streamline the interfaces --- both human and software --- between different tools for data science, like python, sql, and spreadsheets.
Location: NCS 120
https://stonybrook.zoom.us/meeting/register/k0r6mPYCRayk2AOGmyd0qw#/registration
As artificial intelligence transforms our world, what skills will remain uniquely human? How can we prepare for careers in an automated future?
Join Carnegie Mellon mathematics professor Po-Shen Loh for insights on navigating the AI revolution by embracing our humanity.
Dr. Loh brings a distinctive perspective shaped by his dual expertise: serving as national coach of the USA Mathematical Olympiad team (which has won four gold medals under his leadership) and developing innovative solutions for real-world challenges from pandemic response to educational technology.
Through his nationwide speaking tour that reached 250 audiences across 100 cities, he has refined a practical framework for thriving alongside AI.
In this presentation, Dr. Loh will explore how creative problem-solving, judgment, and communication become more valuable as automation grows -- and how students and professionals can build those strengths now.
The session includes real-world examples, guidance for education and careers, and a Q&A.
Speaker: Po-Shen Loh is a social entrepreneur and inventor, working across the spectrum of mathematics, education, and healthcare.
A math professor at Carnegie Mellon University, he also served a decade-long term as the national coach of the USA International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) team, taking the team to gold on numerous occasions.
He has pioneered numerous innovations and has been featured in or co-created YouTube videos with more than 25 million views.
Location: Wang Center Theater
The series is offered by Stony Brook University's Institute for Creative Problem Solving in collaboration with the National Museum of Mathematics (MoMath) and Brookhaven National Laboratory.
The event is free but space is limited. Please register to reserve your space.
ABSTRACT: Today's network and computing infrastructure rests on inadequate foundations. An emerging, promising new foundation for computing is software-defined infrastructure (SDI), which offers a range of
technologies including: compute, storage and network virtualization; novel separation of concerns at the systems level; and new approaches to system and device management. As a representative example of SDI,
software-defined networking (SDN) is a new networking paradigm that decouples the control logic from the closed and proprietary implementations of traditional network data plane infrastructure. SDN is now becoming the networking foundation for data-center/cloud, future Internet and 5G infrastructures.
We believe that SDN is an impactful technology to drive a variety of innovations in network management and security. It is now clear that security will be a top concern, as well as a new killer app, for SDN. In this talk, I will discuss some new opportunities, as well as challenges, in this new direction and demonstrate with our recent
research results. I will discuss how SDN can enhance network security. And I will also discuss some unique new security problems inside SDN and introduce some of our work to enhance the security of SDN. Finally, I will share my vision on programmable system security in a software-defined world.
BIO: Dr. Guofei Gu is a professor in the Department of Computer Science & Engineering at Texas A&M University (TAMU). Before coming to Texas A&M, he received his PhD degree in Computer Science from the College
of Computing, Georgia Institute of Technology. His research interests are in network and systems security.
Dr. Gu is a recipient of 2010 NSF CAREER Award, 2013 AFOSR Young Investigator Award, 2010 IEEE S&P Best Student Paper Award, 2015 ICDCS Best Paper Award, Texas A&M Dean of Engineering Excellence Award,
Presidential Impact Fellow, Charles H. Barclay Jr. '45 Faculty Fellow and the Google Faculty Research Award. He is an active member of the security research community and has pioneered several new research directions such as botnet detection/defense and SDN security. Dr. Gu has served on the program committees of top-tier security conferences such as IEEE S&P, ACM CCS, USENIX Security and NDSS. He is an ACM Distinguished Member, an Associate Editor for IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and Security (T-IFS), and the Steering Committee co-chair for SecureComm. He is currently directing the SUCCESS Lab at TAMU.
Speaker: Huajian Zhang
Location: CS2311