Bio: Samir Das is a professor in the Department of Computer Science at Stony Brook
University. He is currently serving as the department chair. He is well recognized in the
community for his research in wireless networks and systems.
Location: NCS120
Register here.
The overall purpose of this seminar is to bring together people with interests in Computer Vision theory and techniques and to examine current research issues. This course will be appropriate for people who already took a Computer Vision graduate course or already had research experience in Computer Vision. To enroll in this course, you must either: (1) be in the PhD program or (2) receive permission from the instructors.
Each seminar will consist of multiple short talks (around 10 minutes) by multiple people. Students can register for 1 credit for CSE656. Registered students must attend and present a minimum of 2 or 3 talks. Everyone else is welcome to attend. Fill in https://forms.gle/pCVXovgfMfQwGqG38 to subscribe to our mailing list for further announcement.
Abstract: This talk shows how machine learning can address challenges in Astrophysics. We specifically focus on black hole simulations and supernova observations. First, we present a super-resolution technique for black hole simulations that avoids the need for high-resolution labels by leveraging the Hamiltonian and momentum constraints from general relativity. This method reduces constraint violations by one to two orders of magnitude. Next, we introduce Maven, a multimodal foundation model for supernova science. Using contrastive learning to align photometric and spectroscopic data, Maven achieves state-of-the-art results in classification and redshift estimation by pre-training on synthetic data and fine-tuning on real observations.
Bio: Thomas Helfer is a computational physicist specializing in deep learning and physics. Currently based at the Institute for Advanced Computational Science at Stony Brook University, Thomas was previously a postdoctoral fellow at Johns Hopkins and did his PhD with Eugene Lim at King's College in London. In his work, he looks to bridge topics; in his PhD, he bridged theoretical particle physics and gravitational waves. Now, in his postdoctoral work, he aims to find novel applications of deep learning in astrophysics.
*please note: this seminar will be held in a hybrid format*
Location: IACS Seminar Room OR Join Zoom Meeting
https://stonybrook.zoom.us/j/
Meeting ID: 986 1763 0652
Passcode: 882994
Bio: Dr. Wayne Wu is a postdoctoral researcher at UCLA Computer Science, working closely with Bolei Zhou, and collaborating with Trevor Darrell (UC Berkeley EECS) and Jiaqi Ma (UCLA CEE). He received his Ph.D. in Computer Science and Technology from Tsinghua University in June 2022 and was previously a visiting Ph.D. student at Nanyang Technological University. He also spent seven years in industry, where he led the research and development of products that reached more than 10 million end users worldwide. His research lies at the intersection of computer vision, robotics, and computer graphics. He focuses on developing infrastructure and methods to scale physical AI, enabling robots to work reliably and safely in the open world. He has published over 50 papers at top-tier venues including CVPR, ICCV, ICLR, NeurIPS, and ICRA, with over 9,500 citations and 10,000 GitHub stars. His work has received a CVPR Best Paper Candidate and multiple Oral, Spotlight, and Highlight presentations. He was also honored with the 2025 UCLA Chancellor's Award for Postdoctoral Research, recognizing the best postdocs at UCLA, and he was the only awardee from the School of Engineering. He serves as an Area Chair at CVPR 2026.
Location: NCS 120
Abstract: Implicit functions have long been a fundamental representation for both 2D and 3D objects in computer graphics, playing a significant role in the field's early development. With the rise of 3D deep learning and the rapid advancement of neural rendering techniques, implicit representations of 3D shapes have regained significant attention in recent years. In this talk, I will present several recent research projects focusing on implicit function-based 3D reconstruction and neural rendering. Furthermore, I will discuss potential future developments in this dynamic and rapidly evolving field.
Biography: Ying He is an Associate Professor at the College of Computing and Data Science, Nanyang Technological University, where he also serves as the Director of the Centre for Augmented and Virtual Reality. His research interests lie in geometric computation and analysis, with applications spanning computer graphics, 3D vision, computer-aided design, multimedia, and wireless sensor networks. Dr. He is an active member of the technical program committees for major conferences on geometric modeling and has served on the editorial boards of IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics, Computer Graphics Forum, and Computational Visual Media. He has also taken on key leadership roles as General/Program Co-Chair for several conferences, including Shape Modeling International (SMI) 2022, Solid and Physical Modeling (SPM) 2022 & 2023, Geometric Modeling and Processing (GMP) 2014 & 2021, and Computational Visual Media (CVM) 2020. For more information, please visit https://personal.ntu.
Location: NCS 115
ABSTRACT: Through language, we fundamentally express who we are as humans. This property makes text a fantastic resource for research into the complexity of the human mind, from social sciences to humanities. However, it is exactly that property that also creates some ethical problems. Texts reflect the authors' biases, which get magnified by statistical models. This has unintended consequences for our analysis: If our data is not reflective of the population as a whole, if we do not pay attention to the biases contained, we can easily draw the wrong conclusions, and create disadvantages for our users.
In this talk, I will discuss several types of biases that affect NLP models, their sources, and potential counter measures: (1) Bias stemming from data, i.e., selection bias (if our texts do not adequately reflect the population we want to study), label bias (if the labels we use are skewed) and semantic bias (the latent stereotypes encoded in embeddings); (2) Biases deriving from the models themselves, i.e., their tendency to amplify any imbalances that are present in the data; (3) Design bias, i.e., the biases arising from our (the researchers) decisions which topics to analyze, which data sets to use, and what to do with them. For each bias, I will provide examples and discuss the possible ramifications for a wide range of applications, and various ways to address and counteract these biases, ranging from simple labeling considerations to new types of models.
BIO: Dirk Hovey is an associate professor of Computer Science in the department of marketing at Bocconi University. He received his PhD from the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, where he worked as a research assistant at the Information Sciences Institute.
He works in Natural Language Processing (NLP), a subfield of artificial intelligence. His research focuses on computational social science. His interests include integrating sociolinguistic knowledge into NLP models, using large-scale statistics to model the interaction between people's socio-demographic profile and their language use, and ethics for data science and algorithmic fairness.