RI Seminar
Ravi Balasubramanian
Assistant Professor
Mechanical Engineering, Oregon State University

Robotics-Inspired Implantable Passive Mechanisms to Surgically Re-Engineer the Human Body

1305 Newell Simon Hall

Abstract: Tendon-transfer surgeries are performed for a variety of conditions such as stroke, palsies, trauma, and congenital defects. The surgery involves re-routing a tendon from a nonfunctioning muscle to a functioning muscle to partially restore lost function. However, a fundamental aspect of the current surgery, namely the suture that attaches the tendon(s) to the muscles, [...]

RI Seminar
Roberta L. Klatzky
Professor of Psychology
Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition , Carnegie Mellon University

Rendering Material Properties through Touch

1305 Newell Simon Hall

Abstract:  Humans haptically perceive the material properties of objects, such as roughness and compliance, through signals from sensory receptors in skin, muscles, tendons, and joints.  Approaches to haptic rendering of material properties operate by stimulating, or attempting to stimulate, some or all of these receptor populations.  My talk will describe research on haptic perception of [...]

VASC Seminar
Burak Uzkent
Computer Vision Engineer
Planet Labs

Object Detection and Tracking on Low Resolution Aerial Images

Newell-Simon Hall 3305

Abstract:  Object tracking from an aerial platform poses a number of unique challenges including the small number of pixels representing the objects, large camera motion, and low temporal resolution. Because of these unique reasons, low resolution aerial image analysis needs to be tackled differently than the traditional image analysis both in terms of the sensors, [...]

RI Seminar
Alex John London
Clara L. West Professor of Ethics and Philosophy, Director of the Center for Ethics & Policy
Carnegie Mellon University

From Automation to Autonomy and the Ubiquity of Moral Decision Making

Newell-Simon Hall 1305

Abstract:  I argue that there is an important sense in which all decisions are moral decisions and I explore some implications of this insight (and its denial) for the design and human impacts of increasingly complex automated systems and emerging autonomous systems.  This insight is obscured when we think about automated systems by the social [...]

VASC Seminar
Stella Yu
Director, ICSI Vision & Senior Fellow, Berkeley Institute for Data Science
University of California, Berkeley

Data-Driven Learning Towards Perceptual Organization

GHC 6501

Abstract: Computer vision has advanced rapidly with deep learning, achieving above human performance on some classification benchmarks. At the core of the state-of-the-art approaches for image classification, object detection, and semantic/instance segmentation is sliding window classification, engineered for computational efficiency. Such piecemeal analysis of visual perception often has trouble getting details right and fails miserably [...]