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The Seattle Times writes:
“Vivian Yu, a 21-year-old computer-science major at the University of Washington, is graduating this June with a job already lined up – and four other offers she turned down.
“Jessica Ramirez, a UW American ethnic studies major with a concentration in labor studies who is also graduating next month, is having a tougher go of it …
“Similarly, Sarah Croft, 21, a UW biology major, said she was finding it hard to land a job related… Read more →
May 21, 2015
UW CSE’s Taskar Center for Accessible Technology (TCAT) announced today that two of its projects were selected to participate in the eScience Institute‘s Data Science Incubation Program this summer focusing on Data Science for Social Good. Both TCAT projects address commuting and transportation needs in King County, with an emphasis on enhancing access for individuals with mobility impairments.
The first project, ParaTransit To Go, is a collaboration between TCAT and King County Metro Transit’s Accessible Services group to… Read more →
May 20, 2015
CSE graduate student Ricardo Martin Brualla and professor Steve Seitz, in collaboration with David Gallup of Google, have pioneered a new method for creating time-lapse videos of popular or historically significant landmarks from the millions of photos posted online.
Using a process they call “time-lapse mining,” the researchers sorted photos of a particular location by date and devised a method of compensating for differences in camera position and lighting quality. By warping the photos to a common viewpoint and… Read more →
May 18, 2015
Last week, Eyes on Success interviewed UW CSE professor Richard Ladner about his long-running Tactile Graphics Project, a tool for creating universally accessible graphs and charts. During the half-hour audio show, Ladner talked about the importance of tactile graphics in providing blind students with access to figures and diagrams in textbooks, and how computer vision and machine learning techniques enable more rapid translation of graphical images for this purpose. He also talked about Tactile Graphics with a Voice, which is… Read more →
May 18, 2015
Unfortunately, this may be the last instance of an extraordinary annual event: Yun-En Liu, the graduate student instigator, is graduating. (You’d think something could be done about that …)
Today’s menu:
Real Food
Breads
90% rye levain
Vollkornbrot
Black bread
Black Pumpernickel
Pissaladière
Baguette
Challah
Sesame breadsticks
Grissini
Rosemary crackers
Charcuterie
Loukaniko
Saucisson sec
Cacciatore
Chorizo Rioja
Piccante salami
Garlic and black pepper salami
Wild boar salami
Cheeses and bread add-ons
Blue 61
Bonrus
Black pepper d’affinois
Robiola
Manchego
Truffle… Read more →
May 15, 2015
UW CSE Ph.D. student Congle Zhang recently talked with the campus newspaper about NewsSpike-RE, a new machine learning algorithm developed at UW CSE to train computers to more efficiently and accurately parse human language using events described in news stories.
NewsSpike-RE discovers and extracts event relations from a vast array of online articles, and then employs a probabilistic graphical model to cluster sentences that describe similar events from parallel news streams.
From the article:
“NewsSpike stands out among other natural-language… Read more →
May 15, 2015
UW CSE’s Professional Masters Program – a part-time evening/distance program designed for fully-employed professionals who wish to continue on their career paths while acquiring critical skills to move them into positions and projects of greater responsibility and impact – has awarded 699 degrees in the 19 years since it was introduced.
Yesterday evening, nearly 100 of these alums (including Steve Thomas, PMP graduate #1, in 1997) joined UW CSE faculty and staff at a reunion hosted at the Microsoft… Read more →
May 15, 2015
UW CSE computational biology Ph.D. student Daniel Jones is second author on a paper that has just appeared in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The paper, “Let-7 family of microRNA is required for maturation and adult-like metabolism in stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes,” (abstract here), blends wet-lab biology, biochemistry, bioengineering, genomics and computer science.
Stem cell research shows enormous promise for both basic science and, ultimately, for therapy, e.g., potentially repairing tissue damage after a heart… Read more →
May 15, 2015
A lengthy and fascinating article in today’s New York Times fingers 1989 UW CSE alum Nick Szabo as Satoshi Nakamoto, the elusive creator of Bitcoin:
“Mr. Szabo denied that he was Satoshi … But he acknowledged that his history left little question that he was among a small group of people who, over decades, working sometimes cooperatively and sometimes in competition, laid the foundation for Bitcoin and created many parts that later went into the virtual currency. Mr. Szabo’s most… Read more →
May 15, 2015
2012 UW CSE Ph.D. alum Yaw Anokwa and 2003 UW CSE Bachelors alum Christophe Bisciglia were two of the four alums honored at the 2015 UW College of Engineering Diamond Awards gala on Friday night.
Yaw received the Diamond Award for Distinguished Service. Christophe received the Diamond Award for Early Career Achievement.
Read more about the accomplishments of Yaw and Christophe here. Learn about the other 2015 Diamond Award honorees here.… Read more →
May 13, 2015
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