Professor Petar M. Djuric, SUNY Distinguished Professor and Savitri Devi Bangaru Professor in Artificial Intelligence at Stony Brook University, has been selected as a plenary speaker at the upcoming 23rd IEEE Statistical Signal Processing Workshop (SSP 2025). The event will be held from June 8-11, 2025, in Edinburgh, Scotland, and is one of the premier international forums for the latest advances in statistical signal processing.

Professor Djuric's plenary talk, titled Quantifying causal relationships: Dynamic strengths, attributions, and confounders, will take place on June 10 from 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM EST. His presentation addresses foundational challenges in data-driven causality, proposing novel methodologies for quantifying causal strength in both static and dynamic systems, with special attention to latent confounders and attribution analysis.

This work has broad implications across disciplines including healthcare, economics, and climate science--areas where causal understanding drives critical decisions and innovations.

Professor Djuric has been a long-standing leader in the fields of machine learning and signal and information processing. After receiving his Ph.D. from the University of Rhode Island, he joined the faculty at Stony Brook University, where he served as Chair of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering from 2016 to 2023. He is also the founding Editor-in-Chief of the IEEE Transactions on Signal and Information Processing Over Networks and a Fellow of IEEE, EURASIP, AAIA, and AIIA.

Early bird registration for the workshop is open until April 30, 2025. For more information, visit the official SSP 2025 website.

Title: Cyberinfrastructure for forward prediction and inversion estimation with uncertainty quantification

Seminar Speaker: Dr. Mengyang Gu, Assistant Professor, Department of Statistics and Applied Probability, University of California, Santa Barbara

Abstract: In this talk, we introduce four useful tools for forward prediction and inversion estimation. The first tool is the parallel partial Gaussian process surrogate model for emulating expensive computer simulations with massive coordinates. The tool is implemented in the RobustGaSP package available in R, MATLAB, and Python, for predicting both scalar- and vector-valued outputs with uncertainty assessment. The second tool is implemented in the RobustCalibration package, which handles Bayesian data inversion or model calibration by one or multiple types of experimental observations. A unique feature of the package is the inclusion of fast surrogate models of both scalar- and vector-valued computer simulations that bypass the expensive simulation in one line of code. The third tool is implemented in the AIUQ package, available in both R and MATLAB. In this approach, we show that differential dynamic microscopy, a scattering-based analysis tool that extracts dynamical information from microscopy videos, is equivalent to fitting the temporal auto-covariance in Fourier space, based on a latent factor model we construct. We develop a more efficient estimator and reduce the computational cost to pseudolinear order with respect to the number of observations without approximation, by utilizing the generalized Schur algorithm for the Toeplitz covariance. In the last tool, we developed a new method called the inverse Kalman filter, which enables fast matrix-vector multiplication between a covariance matrix from a dynamic linear model and any real-valued vector with a linear computational cost. These new approaches outline a wide range of applications that include emulating expensive simulation at molecular-, meso- and macro-scales, active learning with error control, nonparametric estimation of particle interaction functions, and data inversion from microscopy and velocity fields.

Join Zoom Meeting: https://bnl.zoomgov.com/j/1606285496?pwd=2yJYSG6lx8gMPiibzgAIBQtKHIjuHV.1
Meeting ID: 160 628 5496
Passcode: 472506
AI Seminar: Computational Pathology: Deep Learning, Classification and
Predicting the Future  - Joel Saltz

Abstract:  Pathologists have been looking at tissue through microscopes since the 1800s.  During each pathologist's career,  he or she views slides having  roughly 1,000,000,000,000 cells. Deep learning methods are rapidly being developed to assimilate the huge amount of information walked inside of tissue images and to use this information to predict outcomes and responses to treatments.

Stony Brook is a leader in this type of multi-disciplinary work. I will provide an overview of Stony Brook computational Pathology efforts and articulate how these have the potential to create biomedical advances as well as to drive development of new computer science. 


Bio: Dr. Joel Saltz is a leader in research on advanced information technologies for large scale data science and biomedical/scientific research. He has developed innovative pathology informatics methods, including: the first published whole slide virtual microscope system; pioneering pathology computer-aided diagnosis techniques; and methods for decomposing pathology images into features and linking those features to cancer omics, response to treatment and outcome. He has broken new ground in big data through development of the filter-stream based DataCutter system, the map-reduce style Active Data Repository and the inspector-executor runtime compiler framework. He has also been an active contributor in clinical informatics, having developed
predictive models for hospital readmissions, point of care laboratory testing quality assurance systems, decision support systems for electrophoresis interpretation and graphical user interfaces to support clinical data warehouse queries. Dr. Saltz has been a pioneer in establishing the field of biomedical informatics; he founded and built two highly successful departments of biomedical informatics, one at Ohio State University and one at Emory University. In 2013, he came to Stony Brook as Vice President for Clinical Informatics and Founding Department Chair of Biomedical Informatics - to create a living laboratory for biomedical informatics and to create a third unique biomedical informatics department dually housed in the School of Medicine and the College of Engineering. Dr. Saltz is trained both as a computer scientist and as a physician through the MSTP program at Duke University. He has deep experience in computer science, having served on the computer science faculties at Yale University and the University of Maryland. He completed his residency in clinical
pathology at Johns Hopkins University and he is a practicing, board-certified clinical pathologist. 

What can you learn from over seven years' worth of Twitter bios? Steven Skiena, Distinguished Teaching Professor of Computer Science and Director of SBU's Institute for AI-Driven Discovery and Innovation, will tell us.

Presenting work done with collaborators Jason Jones, Dakota Handzlik, and Xingzhi Guo, Dr. Skiena will discuss what the team learned about how people portray themselves on social media through their political identities and job status. He'll also show us what you can predict about a person based on their self-description.

If you have a disability and are requesting accommodations in order to fully participate in this event, please email libraryevents@stonybrook.edu or call 631-632-7100.

Register now: https://library.stonybrook.edu/library-events/stem-speaker-series-measuring-self-identity/

You are cordially invited to attend the biweekly Brookhaven AI Mixer (BAM). BAM includes one short talk on AI research happening at BNL, followed by an open mixer over coffee and snacks for everyone to network and discuss all things AI. The first half hour will consist of presentations that will be available via ZOOM, and the second half hour will be for in person only networking.

Join us every other Tuesday at noon in CDSD's Training Room (building 725, 2nd floor) to learn about interesting AI methods and applications, engage with potential collaborators, prepare for pending FASST funding calls, and build a community of AI for Science at BNL.

HPCortex - a new, general-purpose machine learning library for HPC

Abstract: I will introduce HPCortex, a lightweight, C++, MPI-native machine-learning library for heterogeneous HPC systems. It implements many common architecture patterns including transformers, graph neural networks, and convolutional networks, and delivers performance portability across NVIDIA, AMD, and Intel GPUs while depending only on MPI and standard compiler/BLAS stacks. I will illustrate its capabilities via a surrogate model for the RHIC AGS Booster digital twin, a simple GNN for a coupled spring system, and a compact language model, then outline the roadmap.

Biography: Christopher is a research scientist and head of the Scientific Computing Applications Group in the Computational Science Department at Brookhaven National Laboratory. Previously he was an assistant staff scientist in the Physics Dept. at Columbia University, and held physics postdoctoral research positions at both Brookhaven and Columbia. He earned his Ph.D in Theoretical Physics from the University of Edinburgh, UK.
His scientific background is in lattice QCD and high performance computing, but since joining Brookhaven in 2020 his research interests have expanded to include machine learning, applied mathematics and performance analysis, with a particular emphasis on building tools to support scientific research on HPC systems.

Location: CDS, Bldg. 725, Training Room

Join ZoomGov Meeting: https://bnl.zoomgov.com/j/1604143373?pwd=hHT2yaIjahBIQ6tieURFqs8Pwex9gU.1

Meeting ID: 160 414 3373
Passcode: 277410

AI3, SBU Libraries and IACS present
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
Paul Fain is co-founder of Work Shift, editor of the must-read newsletter, The Job, and host of The Cusp podcast. A veteran higher education reporter, Paul is perhaps the nation's top journalist focused on connections between education and work. He started Work Shift after a decade as a senior reporter and then news editor at Inside Higher Ed, where he led the outlet's coverage of low-income and first-generation students, college completion, community colleges, federal policy, and emerging models of higher education. He also was the founding host of the successful podcast, The Key with Inside Higher Ed, and has contributed chapters for books on innovation in higher education, published by the Harvard University Press and the Stanford University Press. Earlier in his career, Paul was a senior reporter at The Chronicle of Higher Education.

Limited Seats!

Registration is required.
TITLE: Sampling Using Langevin Diffusions Beyond the Worst-Case by Andrej Risteski of CMU


ABSTRACT: Many tasks involving generative models involve being able to sample from distributions parametrized as p(x) = e^{-f(x)}/Z where Z is the normalizing constant, for some function f whose values and gradients we can query. This mode of access to f is natural -- for instance sampling from posteriors in latent-variable models. Classical results show that a natural random walk, Langevin diffusion, mixes rapidly when f is convex. Unfortunately, even in simple examples, the applications listed above will entail working with functions f that are nonconvex.

We exhibit instances where Langevin diffusion (combined with other tools) can provably be shown to mix rapidly in instances of relevance in practice: distributions p that are multimodal, as well as distributions p that have a natural manifold structure on their level sets. 
The Center of Excellence in Wireless and Information Technology (CEWIT) will host the 16th International Conference on Emerging Technologies for a Smarter World (CEWIT2020) virtually on November 5, 2020. The conference will center on the four major fields which are penetrating our business and personal lives: Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence, Blockchain and Computational Medicine. For more info visit: https://www.cewit.org/.