Join your friends at DoIT for a workshop on Zoom's AI Companion

AI Companion is a meeting summary tool that can capture and summarize what is said in a Zoom meeting transcript, eliminating the need for a notetaker. In addition, meeting participants can use AI Companion to ask questions to a chat bot to get clarity on information within a meeting, and they can also use it to create stylistic virtual backgrounds.

Register here for the online session
Abstract: Sea ice is crucial to Earth's climate, Arctic communities, and ecosystems, yet climate change is driving significant losses, threatening polar stability. Quantifying the long-term impacts of a declining sea ice cover requires tools which improve climate-timescale prediction and bring new understanding of climate interactions. In this talk, I discuss how meeting this challenge requires a multi-disciplinary approach. Climate models, while essential, suffer from systematic biases due to missing or inaccurate physics, leading to uncertainty in future projections. I show how data assimilation (DA) offers a statistical framework for integrating satellite observations with climate models to quantify systematic sea ice model errors. Using convolutional neural networks (CNNs), we can learn these errors based on the model's atmospheric, oceanic, and sea ice conditions--what I term a state-dependent representation of the error. This approach enables real-time corrections to subsequent model simulations, which systematically reduces global sea ice biases. I highlight key successes and challenges in developing this hybrid ML+climate modeling framework, including transfer learning to enhance online generalization of ML models, and new methods for integrating Python-based ML frameworks with Fortran climate model code. Finally, I introduce GPSat, a scalable Gaussian process-based tool for reconstructing complete sea ice fields from sparse satellite altimetry data. Together, the DA+ML framework and GPSat offer future opportunities for improving targeted model physics errors for more robust climate simulation.


IACS Seminar Speaker: William Gregory, Princeton University

Location: IACS Seminar Room
The Provost's Lecture Series features talks by SUNY Distinguished Academy faculty members at Stony Brook University, showcasing the outstanding research and scholarship that is taking place at our institution.

Joe Mitchell

SUNY Distinguished Professor, Applied Mathematics and Statistics
Chair, Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics, College of Engineering and Applied Sciences

A Case for Algorithms: A Computational Geometer's Perspective

Algorithms are all around us in every smart device and technology that has consumed our daily lives. As a computational geometer, I study algorithms to solve problems that involve a geometric perspective on data. I have observed that practically every technology and field of study has a need for effective algorithms involving geometric data. I reflect on some favorite algorithmic problems that are easy to visualize, but challenging to solve, and argue that the formal study of algorithms remains essential in the age of AI.

Reception to follow immediately after the talks.

Register here.
CSE 600 Talk: Haibin Ling - Computer Vision Research and Applications


Abstract: Having been intensively studied over half a decade, computer vision has evolved as a broad research area and become mature in many applications. In this talk, we will summarize our work in computer vision in both core vision topics and application-oriented ones. In particular, for core vision problems, we will report studies on visual tracking, visual matching and visual detection; for applications, we will describe our work on medical image analysis, intelligent transportation, smart projector systems and preliminary work on material property prediction.

Bio: Haibin Ling received the BS and MS degrees from Peking University in 1997 and 2000, respectively, and the PhD degree from the University of Maryland, College Park, in 2006. From 2000 to 2001, he was an assistant researcher at Microsoft Research Asia. From 2006 to 2007, he worked as a postdoctoral scientist at the University of California Los Angeles. In 2007, he joined Siemens Corporate Research as a research scientist. From 2008 to 2019, he worked as a faculty member of Temple University. In fall 2019, he joined the Department of Computer Science of Stony Brook University where he is currently a SUNY Empire Innovation Professor. His research interests include computer vision, augmented reality, medical image analysis, and human computer interaction. He received the Best Student Paper Award at the ACM UIST in 2003, and the NSF CAREER Award in 2014. He serves as Associate Editor for several journals including IEEE Trans. on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence (PAMI), Pattern Recognition (PR), and Computer Vision and Image Understanding (CVIU). He has served or will serve as Area Chair for CVPR 2014, 2016, 2019 and 2020.
Abstract: Large language models are prone to memorizing some of their training data. Memorized (and possibly sensitive) samples can then be extracted at generation time by adversarial or benign users. There is hope that model alignment---a standard training process that tunes a model to harmlessly follow user instructions---would mitigate the risk of extraction. However, we develop two novel attacks that undo a language model's alignment and recover thousands of training examples from popular proprietary aligned models such as OpenAI's ChatGPT. Our work highlights the limitations of existing safeguards to prevent training data leakage in production language models.

Speaker: Pegah Alipoormolabashi

Location: CS2311

The Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center is pleased to present a Machine Learning and Big Data workshop.

This workshop will focus on topics including big data analytics and machine learning with Spark, as well as deep learning.

This will be an IN PERSON event hosted by various satellite sites, there WILL NOT be a direct to desktop option for this event. SBU's Institute for Advanced Computational Science (IACS) is one of those satellite sites!

Location: IACS Conference Room #2

Interested applicants must first have an ACCESS ID. If you don't have the ID, please visit this page to create one: ACCESS USER REGISTRATION.


Once you have an ACCESS ID, please login (see top right here) then register here.
How do you get the most out of generative AI? Stop by the library Galleria outside of the Central Reading Room to learn more! Librarians Chris Kretz and Ahmad Pratama, along with David Ecker of DoIT, will be demonstrating tools and tips for writing prompts that make the most of what AI can do. And they'll be hosting Explore AI demos this Monday - Wednesday (March 3rd-5th) 12:30 - 1:30. Whether you're new to AI or a current user, they'd love to talk to you about it.

Location: Melville Library Galleria