Bio: Nathan Urban is the group leader of the Optimal Experimental Design & Uncertainty Quantification group in the Applied Mathematics Department at Brookhaven National Laboratory's Computing & Data Sciences directorate (CDS). He holds a Ph.D. in theoretical condensed matter physics from Penn State, and has previously held research positions at Los Alamos National Laboratory, Princeton, and Penn State. His research interests include Bayesian inference and spatiotemporal statistics, probabilistic prediction and forecasting, multi-model / model-form / model structural uncertainty quantification, reduced order modeling, scientific machine learning and hybrid physical-data driven modeling, in-situ/streaming data analysis at scale, information fusion, decision making under uncertainty and optimal experimental design, and integrated multiscale computational frameworks for decision support.
Location: IACS Seminar Room
Lunch will be provided
Please join us for another installment of Discover IACS as we introduce the research group of Professor Heather Lynch! In the absence of in-person gatherings, we hope this will serve as an opportunity to network and synergize.
We hope you will tune in!
Join Zoom Meeting
https://stonybrook.zoom.us/j/93384849113?pwd=bzc3V1ZGYzVlbmppQXZmWSt4WjhpZz09
Meeting ID: 933 8484 9113
Passcode: 443047
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Scaling the NY AI Innovation Ecosystem
The State University of New York at Stony Brook will bring together leading AI experts to promote a future where AI drives responsible progress. This two-day event will provide a significant opportunity to explore the future of AI, exchange ideas, and connect with those at the forefront of research and deployment. We invite faculty, staff, and students from all SUNY institutions and beyond, as well as industry AI practitioners and policymakers to attend.
Recognized AI experts from academia, industry, and government will present on topics such as AI applications, innovative developments in research and technology, workforce development, as well as ethical and societal impacts.
A 90-minute poster session is included in the schedule. If you would like to submit an abstract for consideration, please see the Call for Abstracts. The poster session segment of the symposium will be held in honor of the Inauguration of Dr. Andrea Goldsmith, the State University of New York at Stony Brook's seventh President. Poster printing for all participants will be covered by the Inauguration Planning Committee. SUNY students presenting posters are also eligible for travel reimbursement.
We kindly ask faculty to encourage their students to attend and to submit their work for presentation.
For additional information and to register, visit the symposium website. Please direct any questions to suny-ai-symposium-sbu@
Zoom link to come.
Abstract: Natural language is a fundamental form of information and communication. In both human-human and human-computer communication, people reason about the context of text and world state to understand language and produce language response. In this talk, I present
several deep-neural-network-based systems that first understand the meaning of language grounded in various contexts where the language is used, and then generate effective language responses in different forms for information access and human-computer communication. First,
I will introduce Speaker Interaction RNNs for addressee and response selection in multi-party conversations based on explicit representations for different discourse participants. Then, I will
present a text summarization approach for generating email subject lines by optimizing quality scores in a reinforcement learning framework. Finally, I will show an editing-based multi-turn SQL query generation system towards intelligent natural language interfaces to databases.
Bio: Rui Zhang is a final-year PhD student at Yale University advised by Professor Dragomir Radev. His research interest lies in various natural language processing problems in understanding, generation, and grounding. He has been working on (1) End-to-End Neural Modeling for Entities, Sentences, Documents and Multi-party Multi-turn Dialogues, (2) Text Summarization for Emails, News and Scientific Articles, (3) Cross-lingual Information Retrieval for Low-Resource Languages, (4) Context-Dependent Text-to-SQL Semantic Parsing in Human-Computer Interaction. Rui Zhang has published papers and served as Program Committee members at top-tier NLP and AI conferences including ACL, NAACL, EMNLP, AAAI and CoNLL. During his PhD, he has done research internships at IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, Grammarly Research and Google AI. He was a graduate student at the University of Michigan and got his Bachelor's degrees at both the University of Michigan and Shanghai Jiao Tong University from the UM-SJTU Joint Institute.
at International Love Data Week
sponsored by The Office of the Provost and
Educational and Institutional Effectiveness (EIE)
Special Talk and Panel Discussion
How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love AI (For Now)
with Paul Fain from The Job and Work Shift
A reporter's take on what we know--and what we don't know--about AI's emerging impacts on the labor market. The discussion will include the latest research from economists and the AI labs themselves about how workers are using AI, and current thinking among experts on how the tech's rapid deployment will play out across job roles, industries, and regions.
Panel discussion to follow with:
- Lav Varshney, Della Pietra Infinity Professor and inaugural director of the AI Innovation Institute
- Nicholas Johnson, Director of AI, SBU Libraries
- Marianna Savoca, Associate Vice President for Career Readiness and Experiential Education
Limited Seats!
Registration is required.
IACS Seminar Speaker: William Gregory, Princeton University
Location: IACS Seminar Room