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Letters to the Editor – Geauga Maple Leaf

Dont Be Deceived by Fake GOP Endorsements

Hello Geauga County Voters,

I have had the honor to serve the past eight years as Chairman of the Geauga County Republican Party.

It seems that every primary election cycle I must address the fact that, historically, our county Republican Party chooses not to endorse candidates in opposed primary elections. Over the years, there were groups that attempted to confuse voters by co-opting our party and its brand with mailers, social media posts and advertisements claiming Republican endorsements.

One recent such group is the Geauga County Conservative Club. It has chosen selected Republican candidates to promote using the Republican elephant image and the Republican Partys name. They attempt to fool voters into believing that their hand-picked candidates went through a formal vetting process by the Geauga County Republican Party; however, that is not the case. Do not be deceived by these fake Republican endorsements!

Another thing I would like to address is a recent visit to Geauga County by Ohio State Auditor Keith Faber. Auditor Faber attended a Mentor Area Chamber breakfast and let me know that he planned to visit our county auditors office and then a business in Burton later that day. Upon his arrival in Burton, he discovered that Diane Grendell was with the business owner. He later told me he had no prior knowledge that she would be there.

After a few photos were taken, he asked her not to use any of them in her campaign and told her that he does not endorse candidates in primaries. Unfortunately, shortly after he left, photos of him with Diane Grendell began appearing in campaign ads on social media and more recently in local newspapers. After discussing this with him on the phone, Mr. Faber submitted a written statement to me:

While I know and have worked with both candidates for County Auditor, I have not endorsed, nor do I plan to endorse, any candidate in this race. This election is about the people of Geauga County, and they should make up their own minds as to who would be best to serve as their County Auditor.

It is unfortunate that Auditor Faber and our county Republican Party have been taken advantage of for political purposes.

Geauga County voters, talk to your friends and neighbors, research the candidates, and please get out and vote in the primary election on Tuesday, May 3!

God Bless and Thank You.

Nancy McArthurGeauga County Republican Party Chairman

In trying to decide whether to write a letter regarding the upcoming primary, I have been weighing which of the myriad of issues presented by the current pollical climate in Geauga County to speak to. It has not been an easy choice.

Do I opine on the mudslinging, name calling and outright lies perpetrated by several campaigns? Do I bog myself down in trying to explain the minutiae of an issue in the short space of an editorial letter? Do I even bother writing a letter at all?

In the end, I decided that the most important message in any election is simply this: VOTE. One of my favorite Abraham Lincoln quotes is, Elections belong to the people. Its their decision. If they decide to turn their back on the fire and burn their behinds, then they will just have to sit on their blisters.

And so I urge everyone, dont get burned, get out and make your voice heard by casting your ballots on May 3, 2022.

Matt RamboRussell Township

During a recent election in my local school district, one school board candidate proclaimed he was a candidate for community accountability. Its a nice catch-phrase, but what does it mean?

Does it mean (as we hope it would) that elected officials, with your interests in their hearts and acting honestly and as servant leaders in the performance of their duties, will be your representatives in the oversite and enforcement of proper spending of taxpayer dollars, no matter whos spending such funds?

And does it mean they will not be driven by personal agendas and personal conflicts of interest and by narrow objectives primarily related to desired results associated with their positions and personal philosophies?

Or does community accountability represent nothing more than an attractive sound bite, devoid of its reasonable and public-focused meaning, for the sake of promoting a set of amorphous goals that broadly speaking may sound legitimate?

Does it mean positioning oneself to be an arbiter of all things for the sake of a chosen few, even when obvious conflicts of interest are present? Is the phrase simply a coded appeal to a select audience?

These are questions you, the voter, will need to answer in the upcoming primary election. Who will be serving you when the rubber meets the road?

How is community accountability achieved when the not-so-wise fox is guarding his/her own hen house? How is a separation of duties, oversite and true accountability achieved when the skulk runs in a pack?

Does the candidate demonstrate an understanding of the issues, an expertise in requirements of the position, a plan for insuring the safe and constructive use of your tax funds, and provide substantive proposals for improvement of accounting systems and checks and balances?

Or has the candidate chosen the approach of an attack dog, without plans to protect the taxpayers of the county and without a focus on your needs and your best interests?

There are solution providers. And, there are projectionists who divert attention from their own objectives by projecting their weaknesses on others. And then there are diversionists, who actively look for ways to cloud your vision, obfuscate the public, and obscure their true goals.

Who would you choose?

With the primary vote on the horizon and with the priceless privilege of the vote available to you, please be certain to study the credentials and qualifications of all candidates, understand who theyll be serving and why, determine if they are capable of serving your best interests and carefully consider whether they, by their actions and words, will actually serve the county residents or will they serve others masters. And above all, vote.

Bill JacksonCity of Chardon

I write to show support for Carolyn Brakey in her new role as board member of the Geauga Board of Public Health (GPH).

I have gotten to know Mrs. Brakey through her activities at GPH and have always found her to be polite, professional, well informed and extremely competent.

My wife has made me aware of some comments made of Mrs. Brakey on public forums such as Facebook that are simply untrue or are, at best, unknown, because she has not yet acted on behalf of Geauga County in any such capacity. The notion that her bringing a fresh perspective to a body that has been plagued with issues for quite some time is somehow a bad thing is mystifying.

The idea that having a lawyer serve on the board is equally nonsensical.To borrow from my wifes comments on the matter:

Public health is the juncture of medicine, public policy and law. Its about creating and enacting policies that branch into every area of our lives and impact all of our citizens.

Its ludicrous to suggest that its not appropriate to have a lawyer who is passionate about individual rights on a public health board.

Those of us concerned with citizens rights and the over-reach of government are counting on the bright voices of peoples like Mrs. Brakey to question runaway regulation and to be certain that our interests are always a part of the equation for any such board!

Jonathan R. BroadbentNewbury Township

Im writing to voice my support for Chuck Walder for Geauga County Auditor in the Republican primary election.

Mr. Walder took over the auditors office at a time when it was in complete disarray and worked diligently to restore integrity and competence.

In his tenure as auditor, he has wisely used his authority to insist that every county department produce a coherent budget plan that makes the best use of county funds to provide services that meet the needs of the public and eliminates waste and misuse.

Not all county departments have been happy about his insistence on correct accounting practices and fiscal integrity, but as a voter and taxpayer I support his position wholeheartedly.

In addition, Mr. Walders background in the management of information technology is a tremendous asset to Geauga County government. He has modernized the extensive computer network and communications infrastructure of county government, and maintained a high level of security in those systems. Having an auditor who actually understands those systems and how to keep them secure is a valuable asset.

I urge every Republican voter to vote for Chuck Walder for Geauga County Auditor in the May 3 Republican Party primary.

Frank GwirtzParkman Township

I saw Jim Dvorak around the community for many years, but never really knew who he was until I joined the rotary in which he was already a member.

It did not take long to know that Jim was very active in many programs benefiting the people of Geauga County. Having heritage in Geauga County since the early 1800s, I appreciate all his efforts in making our county a great place to live.

When Jim spearheaded The Red Tulip Project and asked our family business to help, we were happy to help and glad we could participate. Another good project bettering Geauga County.

Jim has done many good things for us here. I believe he will continue to do so. I will cast my vote May 3 to keep Jim a county commissioner.

Ted BermanClaridon Township

Please vote to retain Chuck Walder as Geauga County Auditor. He has clearly demonstrated the knowledge, leadership and work ethic required of the job.

Chuck Walder has been a great help to me over the years, first as a fellow fiscal officer and now as the county auditor. His experience, knowledge and true understanding of the position are evident as he protects the money of the residents of Geauga County.

This is not a figurehead position. Chuck is hands-on and has proven a thorough knowledge and understanding of what is required of an auditor.

Here is a short list of Chuck Walders accomplishments that I have witnessed in my role as fiscal officer:

There has been a lot of misinformation spread recently in this campaign. Despite the negativity, lies and unjust accusations, Chuck Walder has kept to the facts about his accomplishments and has not stooped to the level of his opponent. That speaks volumes about the type of person he is and is indicative of how he runs his office. He treats people with respect and is respected statewide, as evidenced in the many awards and achievements he has received.

Please get out and vote for Chuck Walder on May 3. Elections have consequences. Chuck Walders experience matters for Geauga County!

Janice SugarmanBainbridge Township

I would like to respond to a recent letter to the editor concerning H.B. 488.Simply put, the bill would allow courts to independently seek adequate legal representation. The bill would further insulate judges from the quirks of the political process.

Ohio judges must follow the Code of Judicial Conduct.This code is very specific in limiting a judges speech and actions with respect to litigation involving the judge. No other Ohio elected officials have such limitations.The passage of H.B. 488 would lessen this huge disadvantage.

Currently, county commissioners can retain lawyers for any purpose, without any oversight. Yet, Judges are required to supplicate to the whims of county commissioners, without recourse. Can you imagine if you were getting divorced and your soon-to-be ex-spouse got to decide if you get a lawyer and to decide which lawyer you get?Neither can I.

In my thirteen years as a judge I have continually strived to increase the independent reputation of judges and courts. This bill would reaffirm the independence and impartiality of our judiciary.

James T. Walther, JudgeLorain County Probate Court

Weve grown tired of the political fighting, the name-calling and especially the innuendosthat try todestroya persons good name.

We read with interestthefull pageadsof bothauditor candidates.We were impressed by Mr.Waldersexplanation of his job duties.The statementwas clear and straight forward.

In contrast,DianeGrendellsadvertising seemed bent upon ruiningMr.Waldersreputation with unproven innuendos.Ms.Grendells persistentname calling in this ad, and other places, does not inspire confidenceand seems rather juvenile. We wanted to hear about theskills she could bring tothisobviously complex job.

What impressed us most about Mr.Walderwas his lengthy list of local people who were endorsing him. Three of our elected officials here in Munson Township, where we live,haveendorsed him.

We believe that Mr. Walders rsum,a four-year record of positive performanceandano drama approach are good reasons to give him our vote on May 3.

Mike and Peggy SaxonMunson Township

Jim Dvorak has been our County Commissioner for several years. He has done an excellent job. He follows through completely on everything he does.

An example: He was the only non-veteran on the Geauga County Veterans Memorial, Inc. A-plus job that he performed.

It was an organization that lasted for 12 years to complete the Veterans Monument which contains the names off all the Veterans in Geauga County on it. It took $500,000 to build it. Amazing that that kind of money went to veterans.

Jim was involved with marketing on the project. He created the Celebrity Bricklaying Contests. Ten events over several years garnered funds for the project, and it was fun, indeed. Lots of people were involved with it.

He performed at the Geauga County Maple Festival, The Great Geauga County Fair and with Kenny Crumpton on Channel 8 at Kicking with Kenny. Jim was an ideal person with the program and he did it very well. That is just one of the things he has done well and good.

Jim Dvorak gets my vote for County Commissioner.

Paul A. NewmanHambden Township

As a retired Information Technology (IT) software professional, I shudder whenever I read of a business, hospital or local government that is a victim of a computer systems breach that steals our personal information, or worse locks out all access until the organization transfers a large sum of money (ransomware) to an untraceable bank account.

I wondered how well Geauga Countys automated data processing system was working and how strong its internet defenses were from such intrusions.

Our current auditor, Charles Walder, took over in 2018 after a serious accounting scam by a county IT employee caused a loss of almost $2 million. Hes been working on system security ever since. He knows maintaining internet security and preventing intrusions is a highly technical, never ending job.

His engineering background serves him well in this regard. There are actually frequent unsuccessful attempts to breach the safeguards in the county system. Each time that happens Mr. Walder and his IT team go over theattempted breach and work to make the system even stronger. He is justifiably proud that in the last four years there have been no successful intrusions.

Geauga County has a $222 million annual budget. A successful ransomware attack would cripple the countys financial operations; payroll, purchasing and payments for needed equipment and supplies would be stopped until the hackers were paid off.For four years, Geauga County Auditor Charles Walder has operated the computer systems of Geauga County government to the highest standards. Mr. Walder is my pick to retain as county auditor. We cant do better, but we could do a whole lot worse.

Gideon JohnsonClaridon Township

Voters have the opportunity to directly affect politics close to home by choosing a county commissioner. We can re-elect incumbent Jim Dvorak or re-elect private citizen Skip Claypool, but wait, Claypool is not the incumbent so why do his signs say re-elect?

Claypool lost to Dvorak four years ago, so asking to be re-elected is an example of Claypools cesspool politics.He is defiantly twisting, bending and/or breaking election rules.

What other deceptive tricks are in Claypools cesspool of politics?Have you ever listened to him speak? You ask him what time it is and he drones on for an hour about his irrelevant personal agenda while never stating what time it is.

Claypools cesspool of politics consists of his personal agenda and not the needs of Geauga County.

Dvorak is an honest, hard-working and God-fearing man, while the only thing Claypool fears is a moderator declaring his time is up.Go ahead, admit it: You have heard Claypool speak and as his hypnotic self-aggrandizement free-flows, you say to others, Oh, that is just Skippy.

Geauga County needs to re-elect Jim Dvorak who has spent countless hours in service to local government as well as community organizations serving others.The clear difference is that Jim Dvorak focuses on the needs of others while Claypool draws on the cesspool of politics to tell you his needs.

I fully support Jim Dvorak as the only candidate that you can re-elect as county commissioner and he is the only Geauga County conservative representing our needs.

Please vote Jim Dvorak for Geauga County Commissioner on May 3.

Timothy H. Snyder, Esq.Burton Township

As a decade-long resident of Geauga, and locally involved civil volunteer, I find the future of my community to be of utmost interest.

I am both personally and historically invested in this community. Like many others though, I struggle to get honest and fairaccess to our candidates leading up to our elections so that I can exercise my democratic duty to help better inform our elected officials of the morals and values that our community embodies.

Too often, we are inspired to fall prey to electoral rhetoric that lands in our mailboxes instead of getting to know our candidates.

I would like to momentarily recognize the League of Womens Voters of Geauga (LWVG) for their efforts to bring access to our county electorate and to provide a forum for important issues and elections throughout our county. The LWVG has organized a candidate forumon Wednesday, April27 at 7 p.m.where you can attend in-person at the Bainbridge Library, attend a simulcast watch party at the Library Administration Center in Chardon, or opt for a live-stream option for those less inclined to attend in person. This is an opportunity to hear directly from the candidates prior to theMay 3primary.

If you would like to submit candidate questions ahead of time, they even have an email address,heycandidates@lwvgeauga.org,to do just that. Please consider participating in this important event and thank you LWVG.

John LateulereBainbridge Township

There is much talk of what the Republican Party is about. Who is a good Republican and who is a RINO?

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Letters to the Editor - Geauga Maple Leaf

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Chess.com Banned By Russia – Chess.com

Yesterday, Chess.com was banned by the Russian government agency Roscomnadzor, the "Federal Service for Supervision of Communications, Information Technology and Mass Media." Roscomnadzor is responsible for censorship within Russia, a busy occupation these days. Since the start of Russia's war against Ukraine on February 24th, Roscomnadzor has banned hundreds of sites including Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Google News, BBC News, NPR, and Amnesty International.

According to Roscomnadzor, their goal is to block two webpages: "On The Invasion of Ukraine" which outlines our policy and actions regarding the war on Ukraine and addresses FAQ and "Ukrainian Chess Players In Times Of War" which is a piece interviewing Ukrainian chess players on their circumstances and views during the early days of the war. Since Chess.com uses secure https webpages, Roscomnadzor is unable to ban these single pages and has banned the entire Chess.com site. Our members report that Chess.com's apps are unaffected. We happily encourage our Russian members to continue accessing our site using our apps or any of the many outstanding VPN services that are so essential in Russia.

We reaffirm our condemnation in the strongest possible terms of the Russian government's war of aggression against Ukraine and will continue to publish content to that effect. We will continue to welcome Chess.com members from Russia who defy the government's ban and play on Chess.com.

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3 schools of computer science cracking the code to academic success – Study International News

Bill Gates famously said: The computer was born to solve problems that did not exist before. In a world where devices play an integral part in our daily lives, his opinion couldnt be more true. The proof is in the numbers.

The US Bureau of Labour Statistics projects that employment in computer and information technology occupations will grow 13% from 2020 to 2030, much faster than the average for all occupations. Its little wonder why. Computer science professionals are responsible for solving complex organisational problems with technical solutions. Hence, their ability to infiltrate any sector that comes to mind. For them, anything is possible with the right qualification.

Thankfully, most universities across the globe are ramping up their offerings to give their students a deeper understanding of emerging technologies. In fact, many are even developing programmes comprehensive enough to produce professionals capable of innovating these technologies instead. These dynamic institutions representing Hong Kong, Australia and New Zealand are proof:

Soon, all new undergraduates at PolyU will be required to take on foundational courses in emerging technologies and entrepreneurship. Source: The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Few universities are as committed to producing successful students the way The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU) is. While rigorous, the experience is still holistic unsurprising from an institution that effortlessly balances 80 years of tradition with a progressive approach. At this top 100 university, undergraduate students arent expected to have it all figured out. Instead, they enjoy a year of exploration before deciding on a major a unique initiative designed to ensure aspirations are solidified before they are pursued in Year 2.

Its new departmental scheme-based admissions curriculum is set to integrate two 21st century elements: Artificial Intelligence and Data Analytics (AIDA) and Innovation and Entrepreneurship (IE). Both will be incorporated into the General University Requirement from the academic year 2022-23, ensuring that while students are gaining a solid academic foundation, they will be preparing for societys ever-changing manpower needs as well. They will be required to complete at least two credits of AIDA courses and at least one credit of IE courses.

Those sure of their decision to take the future-focused route will be able to enhance their newfound skills with one of the Faculty of Engineerings many undergraduate programmes like the BSc (Hons) in Computer Science, BSc (Hons) in Enterprise Information Systems or the BSc (Hons) in Financial Technology and Artificial Intelligence.

The BSc (Hons) Scheme in Computing and AI makes a perfect starting point for each. However, even if students choose to relish in another PolyU faculty, school or department; AIDA or IE courses will always be available as Secondary Majors. Click here to learn how else PolyU prepares students for the jobs of tomorrow.

This School of Computer Science is currently New Zealands largest, most diverse and accomplished division. Source: University of Auckland Facebook

There are many reasons why the University of Auckland ranked first in New Zealand for Computer Science and Information Technology, according to the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2019. It has also placed among the worlds top 100. Its School of Computer Science is behind the prestige.

Founded in 1981, it is currently New Zealands largest, most diverse and accomplished division. Students arrive from all over the world because they know their aspirations are welcomed. Here, a broad range of courses spanning most aspects of computer science are ready and waiting to teach the art of computing.

None of it would be possible without the experts behind the Bachelor of Science (BSc) majoring in Computer Science, Bachelor of Advanced Science (Honours) (BAdvSci(Hons)) specialising in Computer Science, and the Bachelor of Science (BSc) specialising in Data Science. While distinctive from one another, each programme was developed to fix the IT sectors ever-growing skills shortage. Thanks to their effectiveness, more graduates land employment every year with ease.

Our graduates are well prepared for the challenges of the dynamic and fast-growing software industry and are very well received by industry employers, confirms head of school and associate professor, Dr Giovanni Russello.

The School of Information Technology offers a wide array of programmes. Source: University of Queensland Facebook

Are you looking to pursue a bachelors degree in IT, or to hone your expertise in the field with a career-boosting masters qualification? You may want to consider doing so at the University of Queenslands School of Information Technology.

The school focuses on key areas such as: Cybersecurity and Software Engineering; Imaging, Sensing and Biomedical Engineering; Power, Energy, and Control Engineering; Human-Centred Computing; and Data Science. Here, research is facilitated at the Centre for Energy Data Innovation (CEDI) and ARC Training Centre for Information Resilience (CIRES).

The School of Information Technology offers a wide array of programmes. At the undergraduate and postgraduate levels, you can opt for a variety of programmes in Computer Science and Information Technology. These programmes are taught by award-winning teachers in a varied and extensive lineup of expertise. Students are provided with an in-depth understanding and set of skills in computational science, numerical simulation, applied mathematics, statistics, and data science.

*Some of the institutions featured in this article are commercial partners of Study International

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Tim Rice Issues Update on CHESS Broadway Production and AIDA – Broadway World

Tim Rice revealed in a tweet that he is set to fly to New York for discussions about Aida, and the Broadway revival of Chess.

See the tweet below:

Rice previously revealed that plans are underway for a Broadway revival of Chess.

"All in all, despite enumerable mishandlings, Chess has more than held its own on the stages of the world. And we plan to come back to Broadway one day fairly soon. A team is in place."

A North American tour of Elton John and Tim Rice's Tony-winning Broadway smash Aida was previously set to premiere at Paper Mill Playhouse in 2021. BroadwayWorld previously revealed in 2020, that the musical would no longer be a part of Paper Mill's season. Disney Theatric Productions President Thomas Schumacher revealed to the New York Times that Aida will open in Germany in 2022.

The production was previously set to play Charlotte, Chicago, Fort Worth, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Nashville, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., among other cities following its run at Paper Mill.

The new production, updated and re-imagined, retains the beloved Tony and Grammy-winning score and features a book revised by David Henry Hwang, who co-authored the acclaimed original production with Linda Woolverton and Robert Falls.

The new Aida is directed by Schele Williams (a member of the original Broadway cast) and choreographed by Tony-nominee Camille A. Brown. Sets and costumes are by seven-time Tony winner Bob Crowley, and lighting is by six-time Tony winner Natasha Katz, who both won Tonys for their work on Aida in 2000. The music department includes Tony Award-recipient Jason Michael Webb (musical supervision), Tony Honor recipient Michael McElroy (vocal arrangements and co-incidental arranger), Jim Abbott (orchestrations) and Tony-winner Zane Mark (dance arrangements).

A passionate and timeless story for today's audiences, Aida is the compelling tale of star-crossed lovers belonging to feuding nations, torn between their conflicted loyalties to their countries and to each other. With its stirring contemporary score and its powerful love story, Aida reveals that we have the power to change history, but only when we make brave choices and embrace our destiny.

Aida, which opened at the Palace Theatre on March 23, 2000, went on to become one of the biggest hits of its decade, closing in its 5th year on Broadway on September 5, 2004 after nearly 2000 performances. It received five Tony nominations, winning for Score, Set, Lighting and Actress. A tour played 53 North American cities from 2001 to 2003.

Its worldwide reach is greater still. Nine replica productions played 20 countries in 14 languages.

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A new state of the art for unsupervised computer vision – MIT News

Labeling data can be a chore. Its the main source of sustenance for computer-vision models; without it, theyd have a lot of difficulty identifying objects, people, and other important image characteristics. Yet producing just an hour of tagged and labeled data can take a whopping 800 hours of human time. Our high-fidelity understanding of the world develops as machines can better perceive and interact with our surroundings. But they need more help.

Scientists from MITs Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL), Microsoft, and Cornell University have attempted to solve this problem plaguing vision models by creating STEGO, an algorithm that can jointly discover and segment objects without any human labels at all, down to the pixel.

STEGO learns something called semantic segmentation fancy speak for the process of assigning a label to every pixel in an image. Semantic segmentation is an important skill for todays computer-vision systems because images can be cluttered with objects. Even more challenging is that these objects don't always fit into literal boxes; algorithms tend to work better for discrete things like people and cars as opposed to stuff like vegetation, sky, and mashed potatoes. A previous system might simply perceive a nuanced scene of a dog playing in the park as just a dog, but by assigning every pixel of the image a label, STEGO can break the image into its main ingredients: a dog, sky, grass, and its owner.

Assigning every single pixel of the world a label is ambitious especially without any kind of feedback from humans. The majority of algorithms today get their knowledge from mounds of labeled data, which can take painstaking human-hours to source. Just imagine the excitement of labeling every pixel of 100,000 images! To discover these objects without a humans helpful guidance, STEGO looks for similar objects that appear throughout a dataset. It then associates these similar objects together to construct a consistent view of the world across all of the images it learns from.

Seeing the world

Machines that can see are crucial for a wide array of new and emerging technologies like self-driving cars and predictive modeling for medical diagnostics. Since STEGO can learn without labels, it can detect objects in many different domains, even those that humans dont yet understand fully.

If you're looking at oncological scans, the surface of planets, or high-resolution biological images, its hard to know what objects to look for without expert knowledge. In emerging domains, sometimes even human experts don't know what the right objects should be, says Mark Hamilton, a PhD student in electrical engineering and computer science at MIT, research affiliate of MIT CSAIL, software engineer at Microsoft, and lead author on a new paper about STEGO. In these types of situations where you want to design a method to operate at the boundaries of science, you can't rely on humans to figure it out before machines do.

STEGO was tested on a slew of visual domains spanning general images, driving images, and high-altitude aerial photographs. In each domain, STEGO was able to identify and segment relevant objects that were closely aligned with human judgments. STEGO's most diverse benchmark was the COCO-Stuff dataset, which is made up of diverse images from all over the world, from indoor scenes to people playing sports to trees and cows. In most cases, the previous state-of-the-art system could capture a low-resolution gist of a scene, but struggled on fine-grained details: A human was a blob, a motorcycle was captured as a person, and it couldnt recognize any geese. On the same scenes, STEGO doubled the performance of previous systems and discovered concepts like animals, buildings, people, furniture, and many others.

STEGO not only doubled the performance of prior systems on the COCO-Stuff benchmark, but made similar leaps forward in other visual domains. When applied to driverless car datasets, STEGO successfully segmented out roads, people, and street signs with much higher resolution and granularity than previous systems. On images from space, the system broke down every single square foot of the surface of the Earth into roads, vegetation, and buildings.

Connecting the pixels

STEGO which stands for Self-supervised Transformer with Energy-based Graph Optimization builds on top of the DINO algorithm, which learned about the world through 14 million images from the ImageNet database. STEGO refines the DINO backbone through a learning process that mimics our own way of stitching together pieces of the world to make meaning.

For example, you might consider two images of dogs walking in the park. Even though theyre different dogs, with different owners, in different parks, STEGO can tell (without humans) how each scenes objects relate to each other. The authors even probe STEGOs mind to see how each little, brown, furry thing in the images are similar, and likewise with other shared objects like grass and people. By connecting objects across images, STEGO builds a consistent view of the word.

The idea is that these types of algorithms can find consistent groupings in a largely automated fashion so we don't have to do that ourselves, says Hamilton. It might have taken years to understand complex visual datasets like biological imagery, but if we can avoid spending 1,000 hours combing through data and labeling it, we can find and discover new information that we might have missed. We hope this will help us understand the visual word in a more empirically grounded way.

Looking ahead

Despite its improvements, STEGO still faces certain challenges. One is that labels can be arbitrary. For example, the labels of the COCO-Stuff dataset distinguish between food-things like bananas and chicken wings, and food-stuff like grits and pasta. STEGO doesn't see much of a distinction there. In other cases, STEGO was confused by odd images like one of a banana sitting on a phone receiver where the receiver was labeled foodstuff, instead of raw material.

For upcoming work, theyre planning to explore giving STEGO a bit more flexibility than just labeling pixels into a fixed number of classes as things in the real world can sometimes be multiple things at the same time (like food, plant and fruit). The authors hope this will give the algorithm room for uncertainty, trade-offs, and more abstract thinking.

In making a general tool for understanding potentially complicated datasets, we hope that this type of an algorithm can automate the scientific process of object discovery from images. There's a lot of different domains where human labeling would be prohibitively expensive, or humans simply dont even know the specific structure, like in certain biological and astrophysical domains. We hope that future work enables application to a very broad scope of datasets. Since you don't need any human labels, we can now start to apply ML tools more broadly, says Hamilton.

STEGO is simple, elegant, and very effective. I consider unsupervised segmentation to be a benchmark for progress in image understanding, and a very difficult problem. The research community has made terrific progress in unsupervised image understanding with the adoption of transformer architectures, says Andrea Vedaldi, professor of computer vision and machine learning and a co-lead of the Visual Geometry Group at the engineering science department of the University of Oxford. This research provides perhaps the most direct and effective demonstration of this progress on unsupervised segmentation.

Hamilton wrote the paper alongside MIT CSAIL PhD student Zhoutong Zhang, Assistant Professor Bharath Hariharan of Cornell University, Associate Professor Noah Snavely of Cornell Tech, and MIT professor William T. Freeman. They will present the paper at the 2022 International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR).

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PTI-BR and Unioeste foster a moment of interaction and knowledge for students of the Computer Science course – O Presente – Lodi Valley News.com

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Last Wednesday afternoon (20), Itaipu Technology Park Brazil (PTI-BR) welcomed the visit of students from the first and second year of the Computer Science course at Unioeste. The initiative came from both institutions with the aim of linking the solutions developed by the project implementation centers to the university.

On this occasion, the students were greeted by the advisor to the Technical Director of PTI-BR, Tatiani Marcanzoni, and then were introduced to the Center for Technological Development (CDT) and the projects developed on site by the Centers for Regenerative Dam Structures. Energies, Automation, Simulation, and Cyber Security.

The group also had the opportunity to experience actions and initiatives implemented by the Centers for Science and Education, through LabMaker, the Center for Open Technologies, Internet of Things and Regional Intelligence.

The activity was accompanied by the Professor from Unioete, Antonio Marcos Hachisuka, better known as Shiro, who highlighted the importance of the visit. The goal was to give students the opportunity to learn about PTI projects, labs, and career opportunities in computing. As well as awakening interest in an area that they did not know existed in the technology park, he said.

For student Lucas Tomio Darim, the visit to the PTI labs was very important because it allowed the students to discover different areas of activity in the park. It gave us the opportunity to better understand the areas we love and it opened a channel of communication for us to work as volunteers, scholarship holders or interns in these laboratories, he noted.

On what impressed him most during his visit, Lucas commented on the diversity of the institutions fields of activity, covering a wide range of teaching areas. Moreover, many of these labs are interdisciplinary, where people from different perspectives come together to solve common problems, he said.

ICT talents

The technical visit is part of a series of initiatives by the Technology Park to bring the institution closer to the academic communities, allowing the meeting between the student and the professional world in the field of technology.

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PTI-BR and Unioeste foster a moment of interaction and knowledge for students of the Computer Science course - O Presente - Lodi Valley News.com

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NSF Recognizes Three University Scientists With The $1 Million Alan T. Waterman Award – Forbes

The National Science Foundation has announced this year's winners of the prestigious Alan T. ... [+] Waterman Award, named after NSF's first director.

The U.S. National Science Foundation announced the winners of this year's Alan T. Waterman Award, which the agency describes as the nation's highest honor for early-career scientists and engineers.

The winners, revealed on Wednesday, April 20, were: Jessica E. Tierney, a geoscientist at the University of Arizona; Lara A. Thompson, a University of the District of Columbia biomedical engineer; and Daniel B. Larremore, a University of Colorado computer scientist.

This is the first year that three researchers have been selected to receive the award, which was established by Congress in 1975 and is named for Alan T. Waterman, NSFs first director.

As part of the award, each recipient will be given $1 million over five years to support research in their chosen field of science. The Waterman Award will be presented to all recipients at a ceremony during the National Science Board meeting, to be held on May 5 in Washington, D.C.

Jessica Tierney

Jessica Tierney earned a bachelor's, master's and a doctorate in geology from Brown University. Currently, she is an associate professor at the University of Arizona. She has been recognized as a Packard Foundation Fellow, an American Geophysical Union Fellow and is a lead author on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Sixth Assessment report.

Tierneys field of specialization is paleoclimatology, which involves the study of what Earth's past climate was like and why. Her research focuses on understanding past climate change in order to improve our understanding of future climate events. She specializes in developing organic geochemical records of paleoclimate, derived from biomarkers that are preserved in sediments and rocks.

According to the NSF release, Tierneys research has redefined the understanding of global temperature changes in the geologic past and developed a new quantitative understanding of temperature and climate sensitivity to past levels of carbon dioxide.

Lara Thompson

Lara Thompson earned a bachelor's in mechanical engineering from the University of Massachusetts Lowell, a master's in aeronautical and astronautical engineering from Stanford University, and a doctorate in biomedical engineering from the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology program. She is currently an associate professor in the department of mechanical engineering at the University of the District of Columbia, where she also serves as the founding director of both the universitys Center for Biomechanical & Rehabilitation Engineering and its biomedical engineering program.

Thompson is recognized for her research in rehabilitation engineering, specifically for translating her findings on vestibular disorders in primates into interventions for individuals with balance, gait and postural impairments. She investigates various assistive technologies and robotics aimed towards improving balance in elderly individuals and survivors of stroke, as well as how such technologies can increase balance confidence and reduce the risk of falling for these groups of individuals.

Daniel Larremore

Daniel Larremore earned a bachelor's in chemical engineering from Washington University in St. Louis; a master's and doctorate in applied mathematics from the University of Colorado Boulder. Following his Ph.D work, he completed postdoctoral fellowships at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and the Santa Fe Institute. Currently, he is an assistant professor at the University of Colorado Boulder in the department of computer science and the BioFrontiers Institute.

Larremore explores the ways that mathematical models can support scientific discovery and policy, specifically how math can be used to track and understand the spread of human diseases.

According to the NSF release, Larremore recently used computational epidemiology to answer urgent questions about the Covid-19 pandemic, such as: How should the first doses of a scarce vaccine be targeted to minimize deaths or infections? What role could widely available rapid testing play in mitigating viral transmission prior to the arrival of vaccines?

_________

"It is a great pleasure to honor these three outstanding scientists with the Waterman Award," said NSF Director Sethuraman Panchanathan in the agencys announcement. "They have clearly demonstrated a superb record of scientific achievements by using creative and innovative approaches that have further strengthened basic research in their respective fields. We are grateful to all of our honorees for the vital role they play in advancing the scientific enterprise. I am thrilled to congratulate each of them and look forward to their tremendous accomplishments in the future."

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NSF Recognizes Three University Scientists With The $1 Million Alan T. Waterman Award - Forbes

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Students and Alumna Earn National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships – Syracuse University News

Four Syracuse University students have been awarded prestigious graduate research fellowships through the National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP), and two students were recognized with Honorable Mentions. The fellowship recognizes and supports outstanding graduate students who are pursuing research-based masters and doctoral degrees in the U.S. The five-year fellowship includes three years of financial support, including an annual stipend of $34,000.

The 2022 recipients of the NSF GRFP are:

Bajorek studies medieval history and human osteology, with a research focus on the intersections of medieval medicine and religion. This fellowship will allow her to pursue her Ph.D. in medieval studies at Cornell University and provide important professional advancement resources to further her academic career. With a passion for fieldwork, Bajorek hopes to one day work as an archaeological field director at medieval cemetery sites.

As a child, I was fascinated by books about dinosaurs and Egyptian mummies, she says. An archaeological field school with Dr. Guido Pezzarossi in 2018 showed me that a career in archaeology was possible in real life. I envision that a significant portion of my career will be spent leading excavations. I eventually want to become a professor of medieval archaeology, where I can direct a teaching lab of new generations of students.

Coghiels interest in civil engineering blossomed as he was growing up in New York City, where construction projects were a constant presence. He recalls being curious about what was being developed and excited about seeing the finished products. I realized that all projects were meant to keep people safe and healthyand as I got older, I decided that I wanted to use my passion for engineering to help create a safe and sustainable future for all, he says.

With the support of the NSF GRFP, Coghiel plans to conduct research on the environmental impacts of carbon dioxide emissions from construction sites and determine whether there are more sustainable practices to implement in construction scheduling. During his undergraduate career, he participated in mentorship via the WellsLink Leadership Program and worked as a lab assistant under ECS professors Cliff Davidson and Svetoslava Todorova, both experiences he says will positively impact his career.

Working directly with engineering professors taught me numerous practices that I plan to implement in my own research project and future engineering career, Coghiel says.

Through his research, he seeks to find ways to provide healthier airspaces for all, especially underserved communities that are often adversely affected by construction pollution.

Hernndez de Lara has been interested in archaeology since volunteering with the Cuban Speleological Society in his home country of Cuba. Pursuing his Ph.D. in anthropology with a focus on historical archaeology, his research interests include conflict and battlefield archaeology and the archaeology of the contemporary past, heritage and memory. Hernndez de Lara says the NSF fellowship will support his doctoral research, and potentially open the door for future grants to continue developing his research project.

I have met great professionals at SU who have expanded my limits in unexpected ways, says Hernndez de Lara. Interacting with professors and other graduate students in the Department of Anthropology and the Maxwell School as a whole contributed to shaping my approach to the discipline, and life in general.

He hopes to ultimately become a college or university professional, with a significant interest in museums, historic preservation agencies and other public service positions in archaeology.

Tong will graduate from Syracuse next month and go on to pursue a Ph.D. in biomedical engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology. He was drawn to biomedical engineering and a research interest in immunoengineering from an early age and aspires to have a long career working toward defeating cancer and other diseases.

The NSF fellowship provides students and their graduate institutions with a generous amount of money to support independent and creative research, giving students more flexibility to explore research directions which may not be fully supported under a faculty grant, Tong says. Now I can carefully think about what I want to do research on for my Ph.D., finding gaps in the existing research on cancer treatment options and aligning my research accordingly.

He acknowledges his work in the lab of professor Jay Henderson, as well as mentorship from professor Henderson and professor Julie Hasenwinkel, as being crucial for his success. Tongs long-term goals are to teach and mentor undergraduate and graduate students as a professor of biomedical engineering and to start his own lab to continue next-generation cancer research with curative potential.

Two students also received Honorable Mentions in this years NSF GRFP competition. Abigail McCarthy, a masters student in Earth sciences in the College of Arts and Sciences, is researching new methods to evaluate flood risk using high-throughput computing, especially regarding flood risk for socioeconomically disadvantaged communities. Karma Thomas is a Ph.D. student in biology in the College of Arts and Sciences and member of the Althoff Lab, whose research interests include the ecology and evolution of insects and their interactions with plants.

The associate provost for academic affairs and the Center for Fellowship and Scholarship Advising (CFSA) will host several faculty sessions to share ideas about how to increase the number of Syracuse University graduate and undergraduate students applying to the NSF GRFP. The sessions are as follows:

Any of the three sessions can also be joined virtually via Zoom. CFSA staff will provide a brief overview of the NSF GRFP award and the support the University currently offers to students undertaking the application. The majority of each session will be devoted to learning about faculty experiences with the program and discussing ideas to increase the number of applications.

Students interested in learning more about or applying for the next NSF GRFP award cycle or any other nationally competitive scholarships and fellowships should visit the CFSA website or email cfsa@syr.edu for more information.

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Dear Humanities Majors, – The UCSD Guardian Online

UC San Diego is one of the biggest research institutions in the world, known for its biology, engineering, and computer science programs. Students from all over come here to study different STEM-related fields, hoping that their hard work (and the prestige of the school) will help them get high-paying and fulfilling jobs.

Looking at it from a literature major perspective, it all seems a bit daunting.

Youve probably heard the same questions that I have. A literature major? At UCSD? Butwhy? People always question my dedication to the field, my interest in it, and even my future job prospects. I once overheard a girl ask her friend, who would ever be a lit major? She was not talking about me, but I still had to resist chiming in.

The funny thing is that being a literature major was never really my plan. I applied as one because I liked writing, but I had always assumed that my final degree would be in something else. When people asked me what I planned on studying, I would say Oh, Im a literature major but thats probably going to change. I had never felt a strong connection to the subject, seeing it as more of a placeholder before I discovered what I really wanted to do.

But over time, I began to realize that graduating with a degree in literature might actually be my final goal. I really like all of the classes that I have taken so far and Ive heard that they only get better from here. There are not any other majors that I would rather pursue. Unfortunately, the more set on this path I become, the more doubts appear.

In all honesty, I do not know what Im going to do with a literature degree. My parents always told me that with a degree in the humanities, you can do everything and you can do nothing, a sentiment that is not ideal for someone as indecisive as me. No matter how much I rationalize or look up jobs or make plans for grad school, there is always this voice telling me to choose something more practical with a clear career path. Sometimes those voices are in my head, sometimes they come from other people.

I dont mind when people make fun of my major. When it comes to friends I know it is not serious, and that I can always make fun of their majors in return. But every once in a while I get reminded that people with other majors are moving so much faster than I am. STEM majors know what jobs they want when they graduate. They know how they are going to pay their bills. They are cramming for finals week when I sit off to the side with my silly little book, making my silly little highlights. And while some of these may be exaggerations or flat out false, it is how I feel.

The work you do as a literature major, or even as a humanities major, is vastly different though not necessarily easier than what you study in hard science or math. And with a school that is mostly STEM majors, that difference can feel overwhelming. I cannot help but feel that, when everyone around me is talking about clicker questions or MATLAB, I am falling behind and making the wrong decision. That once we graduate, everyone else will know what they are doing while I am still figuring things out.

I guess what I am trying to say is that being a humanities major at a majority STEM school, at least in my experience, comes with a lot of doubt. It is hard and its scary to see everyone around you doing work that is so much more tangible than yours. It is difficult to have a major that does not apply to the job market well while everyone else around you does. This also applies to people who are not a part of the humanities division, but still have a lot of doubts about their future.

What helped me was realizing that college is not a competition. I am trying not to worry about what everyone else is doing, and what everyone else is studying because my path is going to be different anyway. All of our paths are going to be different. Nobody knows what they are doing every step of the way, even though from here it seems like they might. So relax, and take a deep breath. Everything is (probably) going to be fine.

Signing off,

Samantha

Photo by Annie Spratt from Unsplash

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Dear Humanities Majors, - The UCSD Guardian Online

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Gov. Wolf Celebrates TCS Hall Grand Opening, Innovative Partnership at CMU – pa.gov

Today, Governor Tom Wolf joined Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) and Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) to celebrate the grand opening of TCS Hall and TCS Pace Port Pittsburgh on the CMU campus.

This is a new chapter for both Tata Consultancy Services and Carnegie Mellon University, Gov. Wolf said, marking the start of a partnership that will benefit students, the Pittsburgh community, and the entire Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

TCS Hall brings together a great technology company with world-class students and researchers. Its a great opportunity not only to improve technology and speed advancement, but to help train and empower the next generation of technology workers and leaders.

TCS Hall is a LEED Gold-certified research and academic space that houses the School of Computer Science Institute for Software Research, the Master of Science in Computational Finance program and the Center for Business Engagement. It is also home to TCS Pace Port Pittsburgh, an advanced research and co-innovation center designed to help companies bring innovations to life using the latest advances in technology and through collaboration with local businesses, CMU students and faculty and TCS.

The Wolf Administration supported the construction of TCS Hall through a $1 million Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program Grant.

Gov. Wolf was joined at the grand opening by Tata Sons Chairman N. Chandrasekaran and CMU Provost Jim Garrett.

To drive sustainable growth, companies are forming collaborative ecosystems spanning multiple technology disciplines and industries like the ones TCS, CMU, startups and other partners will foster right here at TCS Pace Port Pittsburgh, said Ananth Krishnan, Chief Technology Officer, TCS. This co-innovation hub brings to life TCS belief that innovation has a context but no boundaries. Together, we are answering the call to innovate with speed.

Collaboration between universities and industry is key to addressing the pressing global challenges that face our society, said CMU President Farnam Jahanian. We are grateful for the exceptional philanthropy of TCS that has made possible this dynamic new facility, and for the steadfast support of Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf. TCS Hall serves as a training ground for CMU students as well as a nexus of collaboration for partners across the innovation ecosystem in the Commonwealth and beyond. This is the latest chapter of our ongoing partnership to drive innovation and entrepreneurship at the leading edge of technology, science and society.

Since taking office, Governor Wolf has actively supported STEM education and companies throughout the commonwealth by investing more than 40 million dollars in STEM education in Pennsylvania schools, including through the PAsmart initiative, which launched in 2018.

PAsmart is an innovative approach to investing in science and technology education, apprenticeships, and job training. The program helps fund STEM education grants, training and apprenticeship opportunities, and connects students and workers to unexplored STEM career paths.

All of this investment will help give students the foundation they need to take advantage of opportunities like the ones now available through TCS and CMU, said Gov. Wolf. Students who have built stronger STEM skills through their K-12 schooling will be able to make the most of collaborative and innovative opportunities like this one. Were giving students the skills they need to succeed in school and beyond.

Congratulations to TCS and CMU, and thank you for your commitment to education, innovation and collaboration here in Pennsylvania.

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Gov. Wolf Celebrates TCS Hall Grand Opening, Innovative Partnership at CMU - pa.gov

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