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UMaine Online Program adds new degree and certification programs – The Maine Campus

The University of Maine Online has been working hard to offer new graduate and undergraduate programs to students. UMaine Online offers a variety of mostly graduate programs for students to earn masters or certificates, as well as some undergraduate major and minor courses of study.

Among some of the newer additions to the courses of study for undergraduate students are a minor in legal studies and a new certification program in surveying engineering technology. This certification program provides students with the necessary tools and foundations for surveying technology, and may also act as a starting point for students looking into pursuing a bachelors degree in surveying technology. The surveying technology certification program is the first certification course to be offered through UMaine Online to undergraduate students, and requires 15 credit hours. The legal studies minor can be paired with any of the other undergraduate programs offered by UMaine Online, and takes 18 credit hours to complete.

The newest graduate certification program is in the discipline of data science and engineering. Graduate certification courses require at least a bachelors degree for enrollment. The data science and engineering certification program provides students the skills and knowledge necessary to manage complex data and analysis challenges which are prevalent in a rapidly changing technological field. It is a 15 credit program, and has a wide variety of classes and enrollment options for students to select from depending on their interests within the field.

The newest graduate degree UMaine Online is offering is a masters program in data science and engineering. This masters program is a total of 30 credit hours, and is recommended for students who have undergraduate experience in the fields of computer science, engineering, mathematics or similar fields. The program is designed to teach students a variety of useful skills in the rapidly changing field of data science. Some skills involve data analysis and acquisition, effective data storage and issues facing data processing and storage, leveraging modern computational infrastructures for performing large scale data analysis, effective data presentation and communication skills, strategies for data security and the ethical issues facing modern data analysis and acquisition.

These skills are useful in a variety of fields, as there is a growing demand for those trained in data science and engineering. There is a rapidly changing environment of data and computer science, and as the state becomes increasingly reliant upon advanced technologies, it also becomes increasingly reliant upon those who are capable of understanding complex data and engineering.

The new focus on engineering technology and advanced science studies in the realm of computer and data sciences reflects a rapidly changing technological landscape in Maine and beyond. The UMaine Online programs are designed to meet those new demands and train students in an efficient and affordable way.

UMaine Online is accepting rolling admissions to their undergraduate and graduate certification programs as well as to their masters degree programs. Interested students should visit the UMaine Online website, or contact the admissions office or advisors for more information on any of the available programs.

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Finding their place in tech – The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill – UNC Chapell Hill

In late February, students from around the world participated in the annual Pearl Hacks, a beginner-friendly hackathon for women and non-binary students interested in technology.

The Carolina student-run hackathon, which is supported by the College of Arts & Sciences computer science department and part of Major League Hacking, provides college students across the U.S. with a weekend-long opportunity to compete in a demo fair for prizes, learn and network through tech workshops and meet other students through social events.

Its a really fun way to explore tech in different ways, said Bea Manaligod, Pearl Hacks marketing chair and a senior studying computer science and communications. People can meet each other and feel safe in a field thats completely dominated by men.

Pearl Hacks started in 2014 when Carolina alumna Maegan Clawges saw the gender gap in college hackathons and wanted to start an event that gave women and non-binary students a space to participate. It was one of the first beginner-friendly hackathons targeted toward women at the time.

The directors of Pearl Hacks.

Manaligod said Pearl Hacks helped her feel more comfortable as a computer science major her first year at Carolina. Large computer science lectures felt intimidating, but Pearl Hacks was an opportunity for women and non-binary students to find their place in tech.

Its such a unique atmosphere and a welcoming environment, said Tylar Watson, Pearl Hacks executive chair and a senior studying computer science and women and gender studies.

Our event provides a steppingstone into the major and career opportunities, and it enhances those skills so theyll feel more comfortable in the content and other people around them, Manaligod said.

But students do not have to be a computer science major or have any experience in coding to participate. I attended Pearl Hacks as a participant my first year, said Watson. One of my friends who I went with wasnt a computer science major, but she felt inspired, really loved her experience and ended up declaring her major a week after the event.

This year, the event was hosted virtually due to COVID-19 restrictions, but that only broadened the possibilities. In previous years, the event was limited to students who could travel to Chapel Hill. The new online format offered students from all over the world, including India and the United Kingdom, a chance to participate, increasing project submissions by 25%.

For a virtual event, I was very impressed and excited with the amount of people who enjoyed it, said Manaligod. We had over 500 attendees, 31 countries represented and 69 projects submitted. Though there were tons of hoops to jump through when navigating this new and unfamiliar format, I felt that we were able to recreate the feeling of growth and community as we did when we were in person. We all hope everyone got to grow with Pearl Hacks, and we cant wait for Pearl Hacks 2022.

Not only could participants network with more than 20 sponsors like Amazon and Bandwidth, but they got to meet with students from all over the world and form new tech communities.

The networking was invaluable, the workshops were super informative and well-organized, and of course, the project experience itself opened my eyes to new skills that I hadnt previously had the opportunity to explore, said Melody Griesen, a junior studying computer science at North Carolina State University who was part of Februarys event. I absolutely loved my experience at Pearl Hacks my only frustration is that I have to wait a full year to participate again.

See this years Pearl Hacks projects

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Finding their place in tech - The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill - UNC Chapell Hill

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In Nairobi, Female Coders Are Flipping the Silicon Valley Trope on Its Head – Vogue

In the popular history of Kenyas technology industry, women are at the center. It was a woman, Ory Okolloh Mwangi, who first put out a call on her blog, kenyanpundit, inviting coders to build a platform that would track violence and other emergencies following the 20072008 elections, resulting in the now global platform known as Ushahidi. It was market women, shunned by formal banks well into the 1990s, who arguably have been driving the use of mobile money, making Kenya the world leader in such technology. Advocacy through organizations like the Lawyers Hub, a leading digital law group, is driven by women, and the most prominent tech training platforms in the country, like AkiraChix and Akili Dada, were founded and are run by women.

Women are and have always been the beating heart of Africas unlikeliest tech success stories. But while women drive the conversation, Kenyan society still routinely treats the work of women as secondary. And so a group of Kenyan women is working to increase the visibility and influence of women in tech by providing the mentorship and skills that young women need to not only succeed in one of the most competitive tech markets in the developing world but have their contributions recognized as well.

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In Nairobi, Female Coders Are Flipping the Silicon Valley Trope on Its Head - Vogue

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Examining the Environmental Impact of Computation and Future of Green Computing – HPCwire

March 4, 2021 When you think about your carbon footprint, what comes to mind? Driving and flying, probably. Perhaps home energy consumption or those daily Amazon deliveries. But what about watching Netflix or having Zoom meetings? Ever thought about the carbon footprint of the silicon chips inside your phone, smartwatch or the countless other devices inside your home?

Every aspect of modern computing, from the smallest chip to the largest data center comes with a carbon price tag. For the better part of a century, the tech industry and the field of computation as a whole have focused on building smaller, faster, more powerful devices but few have considered their overall environmental impact.

Researchers at theHarvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences(SEAS) are trying to change that.

Over the next decade, the demand, number and types of devices is only going to grow, said Udit Gupta, a PhD candidate in Computer Science at SEAS. We want to know what impact that will have on the environment and how we, as a field, should be thinking about how we adopt more sustainable practices.

Gupta, along withGu-Yeon Wei, the Robert and Suzanne Case Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, andDavid Brooks, the Haley Family Professor of Computer Science, will presenta paper on the environmental footprint of computingat theIEEE International Symposium on High-Performance Computer Architecture.

The SEAS research is part of a collaboration with Facebook, where Gupta is an intern, and Arizona State University.

The team not only explored every aspect of computing, from chip architecture to data center design, but also mapped the entire lifetime of a device, from manufacturing to recycling, to identify the stages where the most emissions occur.

The team found that most emissions related to modern mobile and data-center equipment come from hardware manufacturing and infrastructure.

A lot of the focus has been on how we reduce the amount of energy used by computers, but we found that its also really important to think about the emissions from just building these processors, said Brooks. If manufacturing is really important to emissions, can we design better processors? Can we reduce the complexity of our devices so that manufacturing emissions are lower?

Take chip design, for example.

Todays chips are optimized for size, performance and battery life. The typical chip is about 100 square millimeters of silicon and houses billions of transistors. But at any given time, only a portion of that silicon is being used. In fact, if all the transistors were fired up at the same time, the device would exhaust its battery life and overheat. This so-called dark silicon improves a devices performance and battery life but its wildly inefficient if you consider the carbon footprint that goes into manufacturing the chip.

You have to ask yourself, what is the carbon impact of that added performance, said Wei. Dark silicon offers a boost in energy efficiency but whats the cost in terms of manufacturing? Is there a way to design a smaller and smarter chip that uses all of the silicon available? That is a really intricate, interesting, and exciting problem.

The same issues face data centers. Today, data centers, some of which span many millions of square feet, account for 1 percent of global energy consumption, a number that is expected to grow.

As cloud computing continues to grow, decisions about where to run applications on a device or in a data center are being made based on performance and battery life, not carbon footprint.

We need to be asking whats greener, running applications on the device or in a data center, said Gupta. These decisions must optimize for global carbon emissions by taking into account application characteristics, efficiency of each hardware device, and varying power grids over the day.

The researchers are also challenging industry to look at the chemicals used in manufacturing.

Adding environmental impact to the parameters of computational design requires a massive cultural shift in every level of the field, from undergraduate CS students to CEOs.

To that end, Brooks has partnered withEmbedded EthiCS, a Harvard program that embeds philosophers directly into computer science courses to teach students how to think through the ethical and social implications of their work. Brooks is including an Embedded EthiCS module on computational sustainability in COMPSCI 146: Computer Architecture this spring.

The researchers also hope to partner with faculty from Environmental Science and Engineering at SEAS and the Harvard University Center for the Environment to explore how to enact change at the policy level.

The goal of this paper is to raise awareness of the carbon footprint associated with computing and to challenge the field to add carbon footprint to the list of metrics we consider when designing new processes, new computing systems, new hardware, and new ways to use devices. We need this to be a primary objective in the development of computing overall, said Wei.

The paper was co-authored by Sylvia Lee, Jordan Tse, Hsien-Hsin S. Lee and Carole-Jean Wu from Facebook and Young Geun Kim from Arizona State University.

Source: Leah Burrows, Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences

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Missouri S&T announces 2021 Honorary St. Pats and Honorary Knights – Missouri S&T News and Research

The St. Pats Board at Missouri S&T has announced that Kevin and Meg Brady will serve as Honorary St. Patricks and parade marshals for the 113th St. Pats celebration. The two were originally scheduled to serve in the 2020 event before it was postponed due to COVID-19 concerns.

The board also announced the 2021 Honorary Knights of St. Patrick. The eight Honorary Knights are Dr. Mo Dehghani, Deanne Jackson, Floyd Jernigan Jr., Dr. Merilee Krueger, Dr. Bruce McMillin, Helene Hardy Pierce, Sandy Simmons-Gamble and Dr. John Wagner.

The new knights will be honored during a public coronation at 7 p.m. Friday, March 12, at an online event. The events website or video conference link will be available at stpats.mst.edu closer to the event.

The Honorary St. Pats will be a part of the 2021 St. Pats Reverse Parade, which begins at 10 a.m. Saturday, March 13, at Rolla Lions Club Den and Park located at 512 W. Lions Club Drive in Rolla, Missouri. Biographical information is as follows:

2021 Honorary St. Pats and parade marshals Kevin and Meg Brady

Kevin Brady of Rolla, Missouri, is retired senior finance and accounting manager in student affairs at Missouri S&T, where he guided the budget and fiscal operations for the division and advised the S&T BBQ Club on campus. He is also the former advisor for Theta Tau Omega, now known as the Fraternal Order of Leaders. Brady earned bachelors degrees in accounting and finance from Missouri State University and an MBA from Lindenwood University. He was named an Honorary Knight of St. Patrick in 2005, along with his wife, Meg. Brady attended S&T as an undergraduate student and his familial S&T ties include his father Stan Brady, who earned a bachelor of science degree in metallurgical engineering from S&T in 1949; his wife Meg, who is an alumna; his daughter Lauren, who earned a bachelor of science degree in psychology from S&T in 2008; and his son Mitchell, a 2017 St. Pats Court student member, who earned a bachelor of science degree in engineering management from S&T in 2019.

Meg Brady of Rolla, Missouri, is retired senior director of global learning at Missouri S&T. Brady served S&T for over 36 years, holding positions in information technology, global learning and the Center for Advancing Faculty Excellence (CAFE). While at S&T, she helped establish the first IT help desk on campus staffed 24-hours a day by students, served as advisor to Lambda Sigma Pi for nearly 30 years, earned a staff excellence award and was the recipient of the 2018 Womens Advocate of the Year Award. In 2007, Brady established the educational technology department on campus, which specialized in directly supporting faculty in teaching with technology. Brady earned bachelor of science and master of science degrees in computer science from S&T in 1983 and 1989, respectively. She also taught courses for the computer science department in the 1990s as an adjunct faculty member. Her father, Don Sparlin, is a professor emeritus of physics at S&T who served for over 30 years and then taught as an adjunct in S&Ts mathematics and statistics department another 14 years after retiring.

2021 Honorary Knight Dr. Mo Dehghani

Dr. Mohammad (Mo) Dehghani of Rolla, Missouri, has served as chancellor of Missouri S&T since 2019. A mechanical engineer, Dehghani is a research and academic leader who has years of experience leading organizations and building collaborative teams. He joined S&T from Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey, where he served as vice provost for research, innovation and entrepreneurship from 2013 until his appointment as S&T chancellor. At Stevens, he led the universitys development of research programs and implementation of the research and scholarship component of the universitys strategic plan. Prior to Stevens, Dehghani led the New Technologies Division at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and then served as a professor of mechanical engineering and founding director of the Johns Hopkins University Systems Institute. He holds a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering from Louisiana State University, where he also earned his master of science and bachelors degrees in mechanical engineering. Dehghani is married to Mina, a pharmacist. They have one son, Devon. A licensed pilot, Dehghani enjoys flying planes. He also enjoys fly-fishing.

2021 Honorary Knight Deanne Jackson

Deanne Jackson of Rolla, Missouri, is the registrar at Missouri S&T. Jackson, originally from Edwardsville, Illinois, moved to Rolla to join the university in 1995. She earned her masters degree of education in higher education administration from the University of Missouri-St. Louis. Jackson is active with Missouri and national associations for university registrars and continually looks for ways to enhance the student experience at Missouri S&T. She has chaired numerous committees, both on campus and nationally, and tries to frequently volunteer for student programs on campus. Jackson met her husband, Jim Jackson, at Missouri S&T and they married in 2004. She has two sons, Austin Lohr of Kansas City, Missouri, and Bradley Lohr of Rolla, Missouri. Austin recently married Madison Rich and the two are the parents of Wilson the German shepherd. Bradley is married to Meggy Ross and they are the parents of Bodi the miniature goldendoodle. Jackson enjoys dog sitting, spending time outside hiking and visiting national parks.

2021 Honorary Knight Floyd Jernigan Jr.

Floyd Jernigan Jr. of Rolla, Missouri, is the parks and recreation director for the City of Rolla. Jernigan has served as a volunteer assistant coach for the S&T womens soccer program since 2012, having previously coached at the club level in several states and as a volunteer assistant with the Rolla High School girls soccer team. As parks director, he has partnered with S&T students and professors on civil engineering projects and preservation and cleanup efforts for city parks, remediation efforts at Schuman Park and Frisco Lake in Rolla, and a ground-penetrating radar project and preservation of pre-1900s-era headstones at the city cemetery. Prior to joining the City of Rolla, Jernigan served as publisher of the Rolla Daily News and various other media companies. Jernigan earned a bachelors degree in communications from Morehead State University and was a member of Gamma Beta Phi Society, Phi Kappa Phi and Theta Chi. He is also a graduate of Leadership Phelps County. He is married to Barbara Jernigan, an escrow officer for Wiggins Abstract Co. in Rolla. They have sons Kyle, who earned a bachelor of science degree in aerospace engineering from S&T in 2018; Floyd III; and Jay; and daughters Amy, a student services coordinator for career opportunities and employer relations at S&T; Ann; and Holly.

2021 Honorary Knight Dr. Merilee Krueger

Dr. Merilee Krueger of Rolla, Missouri, is a teaching professor of psychological science at Missouri S&T. Krueger began teaching at S&T in 1990 and has taught in some capacity for the last 30 years. Her faculty duties involve teaching and advising students in the areas of developmental psychology. Krueger earned a Ph.D. in leadership and policy analysis from the University of Missouri-Columbia, and a masters degree in developmental psychology from the University of Nebraska. She has been married to her husband, Dr. Jon Wilsdorf, for more than 31 years. They have two sons: Nicholas, who is in dental school following his fathers footsteps, and Sam, who is studying mechanical engineering at Marquette University. Krueger says she considers working with and mentoring students as the greatest part of her job at S&T.

2021 Honorary Knight Dr. Bruce McMillin

Dr. Bruce McMillin of Rolla, Missouri, is a professor of computer science, director of the Center for Information Assurance, and co-director of the Center for Smart Living at Missouri S&T. McMillin earned a Ph.D. in computer science from Michigan State University and joined the Missouri S&T faculty in 1988. He leads and participates in interdisciplinary teams in formal methods for fault tolerance and cyber-physical security in distributed embedded systems with an eye toward critical infrastructure protection. McMillin has authored over 120 refereed papers in international conferences and journals. He is a senior member and Golden Core member of the IEEE Computer Society. He is also a member of the Computing ABET Accreditation Commission, serves as a director of the Computing Sciences Accreditation Board (CSAB), and is an IEEE Computer Society distinguished visitor. McMillin lives in Rolla with his spouse, Lorie, and a cat they found in a tree. They have two adult daughters. He and Lorie like travel, food and wine, not necessarily in that order.

2021 Honorary Knight Helene Hardy Pierce

Helene Hardy Pierce of Sparta, New Jersey, is the vice president of technical services, codes and industry relations at GAF Materials Corp. In her current role, Pierce is responsible for product technical support, testing and regulatory compliance across roofing offerings, as well as industry collaboration and building science research and education. She has been active in the roofing industry for more than 40 years, starting as a co-op engineer with TAMKO Building Products in 1981. Pierce is a Fellow of both ASTM International and the International Institute of Building Enclosure Consultants, and in 2019 she received the J. A. Piper award for contributions to the roofing industry from the National Roofing Contractors Association. Pierce earned a bachelor of science degree in engineering management from S&T in 1983, and was granted an honorary degree in 2007. She was inducted into the Academy of Engineering Management in 2005 and served as its president in 2008-2009. Pierce is also active in the Miner Alumni Association, serving on its board of directors and then as president of the association in 2017-2018. She is currently a member of the Missouri S&T Board of Trustees. She and her husband, Riley Pierce, are members of S&Ts Order of the Golden Shillelagh. Pierce has five brothers and sisters, two of which, Kent and Greg, are also alumni of Missouri S&T.

2021 Honorary Knight Sandy Simmons-Gamble

Sandy Simmons-Gamble, of Rolla, Missouri, is a retired fiscal assistant in the international affairs office at Missouri S&T. Originally from the Rolla area, Simmons-Gamble lived in Houston for almost 25 years before returning to work at S&T. She retired from Missouri S&T in 2017 but continues to work part-time in S&Ts facilities operations department as its maintenance accountant. Simmons-Gamble and her Borzoi dogs have made several appearances in the St. Pats and Celebration of Nations parades, where she walks with S&Ts international and cultural affairs office. She has owned, bred and shown Borzoi, once called Russian Wolfhounds, for almost 40 years, producing numerous champions. Simmons-Gamble is also an American Kennel Club conformation and coursing judge. She and her husband, Rich, are members of S&Ts Order of the Golden Shillelagh and reside on a farm outside of Rolla.

2021 Honorary Knight Dr. John C. Wagner

Dr. John C. Wagner of Idaho Falls, Idaho, is the director of Idaho National Laboratory (INL) and president of Battelle Energy Alliance, LLC. Wagner is responsible for managing and integrating a large, multipurpose laboratory whose mission focuses on nuclear energy, national and homeland security, and energy and environmental science and technology. He manages the U.S. Department of Energy national laboratory of approximately 5,200 scientists, engineers and support staff in multiple nuclear and nonnuclear experimental facilities, with an annual budget of over $1.3 billion. Wagner has been at INL since 2016. Prior to joining INL, he worked at Oak Ridge National Laboratory for nearly 17 years, where he held several research and leadership roles in reactor and fuel cycle technologies. Wagner is a Fellow of the American Nuclear Society and recipient of the 2013 E.O. Lawrence Award. He has authored or co-authored more than 170 refereed journal and conference articles, technical reports and conference summaries. He earned a bachelor of science degree in nuclear engineering from S&T in 1992, and a master of science degree and Ph.D. from Pennsylvania State University in 1994 and 1997, respectively.

About Missouri University of Science and Technology

Founded in 1870 as the University of Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy, Missouri University of Science and Technology (Missouri S&T) is a STEM-focused research university of over 7,600 students and part of the four-campus University of Missouri System. Located in Rolla, Missouri, Missouri S&T offers 99 different degree programs in 40 areas of study, including engineering, the sciences, business and information technology, education, the humanities, and the liberal arts. Missouri S&T is known globally and is highly ranked for providing a strong return on tuition investment, exceptional career opportunities for graduates, and an emphasis on applied, hands-on learning through student design teams and cooperative education and internship opportunities. Missouri S&T is the top public engineering university of 2021 as ranked by College Factual. For more information about Missouri S&T, visit http://www.mst.edu.

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Symposium on the Future of AI: Will AIs Ever Be One of Us? – USC Viterbi | School of Engineering – USC Viterbi School of Engineering

The USC AI Futures Symposium took place January 2021

We all interact with AI systems, but they dont interact with people in the same way that we interact with one another. They know very little, do very little, and learn very little compared to humans.

Imagine a future where AI systems are much more knowledgeable about the world, quickly learn to adapt to our preferences, and can be trusted with critical tasks that go beyond just entertainment or shopping. When will we be able to communicate with AI systems in the same ways that we do with other people?

On January 12-13, 2021, researchers gathered at a virtual USC AI Futures Symposium to share their insights on these topics.

Yolanda Gil, Chair of the 2021 USC AI Futures Symposium

We were very excited that over 300 people from all around the world joined us to learn about USC research in human-AI interaction, which is quite a remarkable number of participants for a virtual meeting and attests to the stature of USC in AI research, said Yolanda Gil, Director for Major Strategic AI and Data Science Initiatives at USCs Information Sciences Institute (ISI) and research professor of computer science, who chaired the Symposium.

L-R: Yannis Yortsos, Cyrus Shahabi, and Craig Knoblock

Yannis Yortsos, Dean of the USC Viterbi School of Engineering, presented in the opening session. AI is a strategic priority for USC, endorsed by our new President Carol Folt and Provost Chip Zukoski, he emphasized. The very rich interdisciplinary environment of USC is ideally suited for its development across all disciplines and all endeavors.

This sentiment was echoed by Cyrus Shahabi, Chair of the USC Department of Computer Science, who noted that human-AI interaction is a major AI strength at USC and will be the theme of the new department home at the Allen and Charlotte Ginsburg Human-Centered Computation Building. Following that, Craig Knoblock, Keston Executive Director of the USC ISI and research professor of computer science, highlighted the innovative research directions being pursued by USC researchers in this area, including commonsense reasoning, cultural adaptation of dialogue, misinformation, knowledge-rich learning, and responsible decision making.

L-R: Ralph Weischedel, Emilio Ferrara, Craig Knoblock, Wael AbdAlmageed, Ram Nevatia, and Liz Boschee

A session in the symposium was devoted to new research on AI systems that incorporate extensive knowledge about the world. The discussion was led by Ralph Weischedel, research team leader at ISI, and the speakers were Emilio Ferrara, associate professor of communication and computer science and research team leader at ISI; Craig Knoblock; Wael AbdAlmageed, research associate professor; Ram Nevatia, professor of computer science; and Liz Boschee, director at ISI Boston.

Though humans easily acquire common sense from an early age, it has been a notoriously challenging skill for AI to fully grasp. USC is a pioneer in AI research which extracts this type of knowledge from documents, images, and special sources like Wikipedia. While there have been significant advances in extracting individual statements, integrating all those statements into a usable knowledge source and using them to improve the performance of AI systems remains a major challenge.

Furthermore, new insights on detecting and handling misinformation were presented in this session. On social media platforms, its essential to distinguish bots from humans as to alert people to misinformation. Multimedia forensics can give reassurance of the integrity and authenticity of images and videos we see online that may be impersonating others (also known as deepfakes). Sometimes, AI systems simply misunderstand information, and qualifying the origins of any given data can help determine if it can be trusted.

L-R: Sven Koenig, Kristina Lerman, Fred Morstatter, Shri Narayanan, Keith Burghardt, and Bistra Dilkina

Not long after USC computer science emeritus professor George Bekey published a pioneering book on Robot Ethics in 2011, we can already see that ethics concerns have gradually taken center stage in the world of AI research.

This discussion was led by Sven Koenig, professor of computer science, and the USC experts who spoke on this topic were Kristina Lerman, research professor of computer science and research team leader at ISI; Fred Morstatter, research assistant professor of computer science and research lead at ISI; Shri Narayanan, professor of electrical and computer engineering and research director at ISI; Keith Burghardt, computer scientist at ISI; and Bistra Dilkina, associate professor of computer science.

New techniques were presented for identifying and measuring biases in data and understanding their sources in order to mitigate them. Algorithms for ranking, which are used in product recommendations and for search, have long been known to have biases due to popularity or positioning, and new findings show that they can be addressed by reducing instability under different conditions. AI systems can also help reduce biases in media by measuring factors such as on-screen time and speaking time for various demographic groups which expose opportunities to improve equality and diversity.

Inclusiveness and equity are also central topics in AI ethics. Inclusive design of AI systems leads to more equitable experiences that take into account individual differences, particularly in children at different developmental stages. Cultural differences can be identified by observing communications among large groups, with promising results based on analyses of open online collaborative projects from different countries.

Acting responsibly often involves consideration of resource limitations and maximizing impact. Several novel AI techniques were found to be effective for large-scale optimization and machine learning, particularly when learning is informed by downstream decision processes.

L-R: Yan Liu, Pedro Szekely, Greg Van Steeg, Aram Galstyan, Xiang Ren, Jose-Luis Ambite

Though growing at an unprecedented rate, AI systems have a long way to go before they can be on par with human abilities to learning continuously and independently. This session was led by Yan Liu, professor of computer science, and the speakers who addressed this topic included Pedro Szekely, research associate professor in computer science and research director at ISI; Greg Van Steeg, research associate professor in computer science and research lead at ISI; Aram Galstyan, director of Artificial Intelligence Division at ISI and research associate professor in computer science; Xiang Ren, assistant professor of computer science and research lead at ISI; and Jose-Luis Ambite, research associate professor in computer science and research team leader at ISI.

The world is constantly changing, which means our knowledge needs to be up to speed. New research on self-supervised machine learning is opening new doors to using data that has not been augmented with labels, which is what most machine learning approaches require. Studying the effects on continuous learning shows that AI systems that can learn to automatically refresh their beliefs about the world. Another strategy that has been shown to be very effective is distributed federated learning approach, which is used when data is collected but not publicly accessible, as is the case with health and other sensitive data.

As powerful as AI can be, they still need our guidance. New approaches that combine machine learning with human predictions have led to improved forecasting of trends and events. Incorporating human explanations and rationale have also improved machine learning significantly.

L-R: Pedro Szekely, Jon May, Mayank Kejriwal, Jay Pujara, Yolanda Gil, and Marjorie Freedman

USC has a long tradition of tackling problems of societal importance through human-AI interaction. A session was devoted to highlight this work, and was chaired by Pedro Szekely. This session included speakers Jon May, research assistant professor in computer science and research lead at ISI; Mayank Kejriwal, research assistant professor of industrial and systems engineering and research lead at ISI; Jay Pujara, research assistant professor in computer science and research lead at ISI; Yolanda Gil; and Marjorie Freedman, research team leader at ISI.

In times of natural disasters, victims and local first responders communicate in their own languages, which creates barriers for aid coming NGOs and other international organizations. AI technologies that are able to quickly create automated translators for regional languages are radically changing the ability to support emergency response and humanitarian aid.

Protecting runaway children from forced prostitution is often difficult due to worldwide commercial sex trafficking through online advertising and transactions that are difficult to track. Fortunately, significant progress is being made through AI technologies which automatically identify and crawl suspicious sites to detect patterns and trends, thereby generating leads and evidence for law enforcement.

Under-resourced entrepreneurs cannot easily develop solid business plans because of the difficulties in getting comprehensive knowledge about prospective competitors, customers, and existing technologies most relevant to their idea. Statistically, over 50% of new businesses fail within the first 5 years. A special customized market intelligence can be delivered through AI systems that automatically integrates years of data for hundreds of thousands of companies collected from webpages, patent filings, spreadsheets, social media, and regulatory filings with government agencies.

Furthermore, AI scientists could accelerate research by automatically analyzing the wealth of data that is now available in the sciences. AI algorithms for systematic search lead to better solutions by quickly exposing any inconsistencies in findings. AI techniques also reduce the time to create new models for complex systems. AI systems can assist and ultimately collaborate with scientists to accelerate discoveries.

Lastly, privacy and security can be significantly enhanced with AI approaches. For example, social engineering attackers (known as spear-phishing) can be deterred if the cost of an attack is heightened when they are engaged by AI systems instead of by the intended humans. Many other AI approaches are being applied to secure financial transactions, detect and fix code vulnerabilities, and predicting and detecting attacks.

L-R: Elizabeth Churchill, Antonio Damasio, Prem Natarajan

Two keynote speakers from the industry discussed significant challenges in human-AI interaction. Elizabeth Churchill, Director of User Experience at Google and an expert in the design of interactive technologies, made the provocative statement that systems create the conditions under which humans make errors, but the nature of those errors cannot be anticipated because every person is different. Prem Natarajan, Vice President of Amazons Alexa, talked about adapting AI systems by teaching them new concepts when the need arises during interactions.

A third keynote speaker was Antonio Damasio, USC Professor of Neuroscience, Psychology, and Philosophy, who discussed consciousness in terms of how behavior is governed by emotional states (e.g., fear) grounded in feelings which are directly linked to biological states (e.g., pain, hunger). He posed the intriguing question of whether consciousness will be relevant for the design of artificial intelligence systems grounded in physical sensors.

Maja Mataric

The closing session of the symposium featured Maja Mataric, USC Interim Vice President of Research and professor of computer science. She encouraged the AI community to consider the use of AI for major societal challenges. She said that AI must be embraced by major institutions and their operations all the way down: how were distributing vaccines, how were communicating about mask-wearing, and how were approaching equity.

As Mataric succinctly stated, AI is not for the futureAI is now.

For more information about the event, including videos of the sessions, click here.

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Symposium on the Future of AI: Will AIs Ever Be One of Us? - USC Viterbi | School of Engineering - USC Viterbi School of Engineering

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7 Bitcoin And Cryptocurrency Accounts To Follow On Twitter – Yahoo Finance

Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- Long before Credit Suisse Group AG was forced to wind down a $10 billion group of funds it ran with financier Lex Greensill, there were plenty of red flags.Executives at the bank knew early on that a large portion of the assets in the funds were tied to Sanjeev Gupta, a Greensill client whose borrowings were at the center of a 2018 scandal at rival asset manager GAM Holding AG. They were also aware that a lot of the insurance coverage the funds relied on depended on a single insurer, according to a report. Credit Suisse even conducted a probe last year of its funds that detected potential conflicts of interest, yet failed to prevent their collapse months later.On Friday, the bank finally pulled the plug and said it would liquidate the strategy, a group of supply chain finance funds for which Greensill had provided the assets and which had been held up as a success story. The funds, which have about $3.7 billion in cash and equivalents, will start returning most of that next week, leaving about two-thirds of investor money tied up in securities whose value may be uncertain.The decision caps a dramatic week that started when Credit Suisse froze the funds after a major insurer for its securities refused to provide coverage on new notes. The move sent shock waves across the globe, prompted Greensill Capital to seek a buyer for its operations, and forced rival GAM Holding AG to shutter a similar strategy. For Credit Suisse and its new Chief Executive Officer Thomas Gottstein, its arguably the most damaging reputational hit after an already difficult first year in charge.While the financial toll on the bank may be limited, fund investors are left with about $7 billion locked up in a product that was presented as a relatively safe but higher-yielding alternative to money markets.The Greensill-linked funds were one of the fastest-growing strategies at Credit Suisses asset management unit, attracting money from yield-starved investors in a region that had for years had to contend with negative interest rates. The bank started the first of the funds in 2017, but they really took off in 2019, the year rival asset manager GAM finished winding down a group of bond funds that had invested a large chunk of their money in securities tied to Greensill and one of his early clients, Guptas GFG Alliance.The Credit Suisse funds, too, were heavily exposed to Gupta early on. As the bank ramped up the strategy, the flagship supply-chain finance fund had about a third of its $1.1 billion in assets in notes linked to Guptas GFG Alliance companies or his customers as of April 2018, according to a filing.Credit Suisse executives were aware but denied at the time that it was an outsized risk, according to people familiar with the matter. They argued that most of the loans were to customers of Gupta and not directly to GFG companies, the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private.Over time, the proportion of loans linked to GFG and customers appeared to decrease, while new counterparties popped up in fund disclosures that packaged loans to multiple borrowers -- making it harder to determine who the ultimate counterparty is. Many of the vehicles were named after roads and landmarks around Lex Greensills hometown in Australia.The executives in charge of the fund also knew that much of the insurance coverage they relied on to make the funds look safe was dependent on just a single insurer, according to the Wall Street Journal. They considered requiring the funds to secure coverage from a broader set of insurers, with no single firm providing more than 20% of the coverage, but never put the policy in place, the newspaper said.A spokesman for Credit Suisse declined to comment.Greensill, meanwhile, was looking for new ways to fuel the growth of his trade finance empires after the collapse of the GAM funds removed a major buyer of his assets. In 2019, SoftBank Group Corp. stepped in, injecting almost $1.5 billion through its Vision Fund to become Greensills largest backer. It also made a big investment in the Credit Suisse supply chain finance funds, putting in hundreds of millions of dollars, though the exact timing isnt clear.Over the course of 2019, the flagship fund more than doubled in size, but soon questions arose about the intricate relationship between Greensill and SoftBank that fueled the growth. The funds had an unusual structure in that they used a warehousing agreement to buy the assets from Greensill Capital, with no Credit Suisse fund manager doing extensive due diligence on them. Within the broad framework set by the funds, the seller of the assets -- Greensill -- basically decided what the funds would buy.Credit Suisse started an internal probe that found, among other things, that the funds had extended large amounts of financings to other companies backed by SoftBanks Vision Fund, creating the impression that SoftBank was using them and its sway over Greensill to prop up its other investments. SoftBank pulled its fund investment -- some $700 million -- and Credit Suisse overhauled the fund guidelines to limit exposure to a single borrower.Neither Gottstein nor Eric Varvel, the head of the asset management unit, or Lara Warner, the head of risk and compliance, appeared to see a need for deeper changes. The bank reiterated it had confidence in the control structure at the asset management unit.Credit Suisses review didnt mention at the time that Greensill had also extended financing to another of his backers, General Atlantic. The private equity firm had invested $250 million in Greensill Capital in 2018. The following year, Greensill made a $350 million loan to General Atlantic, using money from the Credit Suisse funds, according to the Wall Street Journal. The loan is currently being refinanced, said a person familiar with the matter.A spokeswoman for General Atlantic declined to comment.Shortly after the Credit Suisse probe concluded, more red flags popped up. In Germany, regulator BaFin was looking into a small Bremen-based lender that Greensill had bought and propped up with money from the SoftBank injection. Greensill was using the bank effectively to warehouse assets he sourced, but BaFin was worried that too many of the those assets were linked to Guptas GFG -- a risk that the Credit Suisses managers, for their part, had brushed off earlier.SoftBank, meanwhile, was quietly starting to write off its investment in a stunning reversal from a bet it had made only a year earlier. By the end of last year, it had substantially written down the stake, and its considering dropping the valuation close to zero, people familiar with the matter said earlier this month.Credit Suisse, however, was highlighting the success of the funds to investors. Varvel, the head of asset management, listed them in a Dec. 15 presentation as an example of the innovative and higher-margin fixed-income offerings that the bank was planning to focus on.By that time, Greensill already knew that a little-known Australian insurer called Bond and Credit Company had decided not to renew policies covering $4.6 billion in corporate loans his firm had sourced. The policies were due to lapse on March 1, prompting a last-ditch effort from the supply-chain firm to take the insurer to court in Australia. That day, a judge in Sydney struck down Greensills injunction, triggering the series of events that have since reverberated around the world.Credit Suisse didnt know until very recently that the insurance was about to lapse, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.In an update to investors Tuesday, Credit Suisse said that several factors cumulatively led to the decision to freeze the funds, and that it was looking for ways to return cash holdings. But in a twist that may complicate the liquidation of the remainder, it also said that Greensills German Bank was one of the insured parties and plays a role in the claims process, and that bank was just shuttered by BaFin.Many of the assets in the funds have protection to make them more appealing to investors seeking an alternative to money market funds. Yet the second-biggest of them, the High Income Fund, doesnt use insurance. Its also the fund with the least liquidity, with less than 20% of the net assets in cash.Credit Suisse has said it wasnt aware of any evidence suggesting financial irregularities with the papers issued by Greensill or by the underlying companies. The bank still hasnt commented on how many of the assets in the funds are tied to Guptas GFG Alliance.For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.2021 Bloomberg L.P.

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The Price Average Is the Line in the Sand for Bitcoin Bulls, Analyst Says – CoinDesk – CoinDesk

While bitcoin can suffer deeper drawdowns because of traditional market instability, its broader bullish trend would remain valid as long as historically strong chart support is held intact.

The 21-week SMA (Simple Moving Average) is the level to defend for the bulls, trader and technical analyst Michal van de Poppe told CoinDesk. The bias remains bullish as long as the SMA support is intact.

An SMA is an arithmetic moving average calculated by adding recent prices and dividing the tally by the number of periods. SMAs are trend-following, lagging indicators and often act as support and resistance levels.

The 21-week SMA acted as a price floor during the previous bull market, as seen below.

The cryptocurrency repeatedly found dip demand (marked by arrows) around the 21-week SMA throughout the rally from $300 to $19,783 seen in the October 2015-December 2017 period.

If history is a guide, deeper pullbacks, if any, could run out of steam around the 21-week SMA this year. The technical line is now located at $32,240, while bitcoin is changing hands near $46,500.

A continued rise in the U.S. Treasury yields could push the dollar higher, sending bitcoin toward the SMA support.

One cannot rule out that possibility as Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell defied expectations on Thursday by expressing little concern regarding the recent spike in yields. That has left the doors open for a further rally in yields and an extension of last weeks risk aversion trades.

The dollar strengthened, while bitcoin and stocks fell in the seven days to Feb. 28, as the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield surged to a 12-month high of 1.6% and investors priced in higher odds of an early unwinding of the Federal Reserves stimulus.

The yield remains elevated near 1.6% at press time, and the dollar index is hovering at a three-month high of 92.00. Also, European stocks and the U.S. stock futures are flashing red.

Both bitcoin and stocks may find some relief later Friday if the U.S. nonfarm payrolls data due at 13:30 UTC paints a gloomy picture of the labor market and sends yields lower.

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Massive morph to the mainstream: Citi call fires bitcoin price – The Australian Financial Review

Further, as US tech giants such as PayPal under its peer-to-peer Venmo business and Square enable bitcoin transactions, it was arguably moving closer to fulfilling one of the key roles of money in exchanging labour for future purchasing power in a single unit of account.

Bitcoins supporters argue its clearer role in the future of money means the price which topped $US50,400 on Monday is less relevant to its emerging use cases over the medium term.

Citi also made headlines by claiming bitcoin could uproot the US dollar as the primary means of payment between global importers and exporters: A focus on global reach and neutrality could see bitcoin become an international trade currency, Citi says.

This would take advantage of bitcoins decentralised and borderless design, its lack of foreign exchange exposure, its speed and cost advantage in moving money, the security of its payments, and its traceability.

If Citi is right about bitcoins ascent it may flatten banks lucrative foreign exchange fees and could do even more damage to pure-play discount rivals or middlemen such as Western Union, OFX Group, Transferwise and Travelex.

Blue-chip tech giant Facebook has already cottoned on to the possibility of creating its own blockchain-based digital currency named Diem as an exchange mechanism to eliminate overseas transfer fees and the spreads charged on currency exchanges to send money internationally.

In theory, a person in the US could transmit savings to Asia if the sender and receiver both had free Diem wallets via Facebook accounts. The recipients Diem could be exchanged into local currency with lower fees as the middleman in the process was cut out, alongside the ability to charge a mark-up on spot FX rates.

The idea is also applicable to tourists who could use a decentralised cryptocurrency or one backed by a basket of currencies (as in Facebooks Diem) to pay for goods or services abroad without paying a mark-up to middlemen often dealing in cash over-the-counter at airports, for example.

If central banks launch digital currencies of their own and allow citizens to hold accounts directly, this could accelerate a future where travel between Australia and New Zealand no longer required exchanging one fiat currency for another.

Central bank fiat-backed digital currencies and direct-to-consumer bank accounts could also disintermediate retail banks fee streams in other ways and would meet fierce resistance from the banking establishment.

Citi says bitcoin could especially appeal to the public and private sector in emerging nations where currencies were vulnerable to extreme devaluation if governments were considered uncreditworthy. It cited Africas largest economy, Nigeria, as an example where importers were forced to pay far more for US dollars in 2020 after its economy was rocked by low oil prices and COVID-19.

Other petrodollar economies across Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East can still only trade oil in US dollars as a result of deals done in exchange for US security and largesse after President Richard Nixon unpegged the dollar from gold in 1971.

Citi concluded there were obstacles ahead in the crypto space around regulation, custody, environmental concerns, insurance and cybersecurity, but the opportunities outweighed the risks to mean crypto was near a tipping point into joining the mainstream.

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SSM Health innovates kidney care with predictive analytics and machine learning – Healthcare IT News

SSM Health, a nonprofit with $8 billion in revenue, provides its communities with high-quality care for vulnerable populations. One of the most vulnerable populations is made up of patients with kidney disease.

THE PROBLEM

Kidney disease is complex because 90% of people with the disease do not know they have it until they need dialysis or a transplant. There is little disease education or preventive efforts in the initial stages, making chronic kidney disease expensive to treat. Patients typically wind up receiving lower outcomes and lower quality of life than physicians would like to see.

CKD and end-stage renal disease patients manage 15-20 medications daily and have multiple comorbid conditions, complicating treatment.

"Patients with kidney disease make up under 5% of our patient population, but account for more than 20% of our total costs," said Carter Dredge, chief transformation officer at SSM Health. "We needed the focus and expertise that our partner Strive Health delivers through predictive analytics and the care team to better support our most at-risk population.

"Across the broad primary care base, providers are seeing patients with a range of health concerns, and CKD often involves just five to 10 patients in their panel," he continued. "During each visit, PCPs have limited time to meet these complex needs, and CKD symptoms are subtle. Often, patients were under-diagnosed for advanced CKD."

SSM Health needed a focused solution that helpedpredict the best time to engage patients to optimize the patient experience, improve outcomes and lower costs.

"At SSM Health, as our core clinical teams build the main programs that encompass all our patients and interventions across multiple populations, partnering with Strive Health has delivered focused care for a particularly complex condition that connects to the larger innovation pipeline, aiding the move to more risk-based contracts by helping build the required care coordination and analytics programs for more specific patient cohorts," Dredge said.

PROPOSAL

Analytics can offer diagnostic assistance and guide treatment decisions. Combining data from several sources, including claims, clinical data, live feeds from health exchanges, dialysis machines and demographic information for social determinants of health, algorithms can predict adverse events, including kidney failure during a given time frame or a cardiology event.

"The program we developed with Strive Health delivers comprehensive clinical services for CKD and ESRD patients that significantly improve quality of care and outcomes while lowering the total cost of care for patients," Dredge said. "Thirty-three algorithms assist with treating CKD, including one that can predict CKD progression to ESRD with 95% accuracy."

Carter Dredge, SSM Health

Strive Health's technology and full clinical model bring a focused approach to care, he added.

"We are intervening with the right patients at the right time," he explained. "Our care team can see when a patient is progressing more rapidly toward kidney failure and can take the time to fully educate and coach the patient through making the best renal replacement therapy option for them, whether this is home dialysis, in-center dialysis, preemptive transplant or conservative care."

MARKETPLACE

There are various vendors of predictive analytics technology on the market today. Some of these vendors include Alteryx, Anodot, Domo, Gainsight, IBM, Infer, Microsoft, Qrvey, RapidMiner, SAP, SAS Institute, Sisense and Strive Health.

MEETING THE CHALLENGE

"Strive Health's CareMultiplier platform, powered by proprietary machine learning algorithms, makes sense of massive amounts of data, cuts through the noiseand allows our clinicians to focus on doing what only they can do, deliver high-touch patient care," Dredge explained.

"Our clinical teams use predictive analytics in their day-to-day care," he continued. "Each patient receives an overall risk score that serves as a starting point for treatment and flows through our clinical care systems. As we engage our members, our team then uses focused initiatives developed through the analytics to be more proactive in their care."

As an example, SSM Health has a patient cohort called Planned Starts. Strive's technology has identified them as progressing toward dialysis in the next six to 12 months. These analytics allow clinicians to deploy focused interventions and care plans to help prevent these patients from "crashing" into dialysis.

RESULTS

"Strive Health brings economies of scale, regionalization and nationalization to a fragmented kidney care process," Dredge reported. "The program was launched in June 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic. While the pandemic impacted most in the country, the first four months of data are promising, showing a more than 20% reduction in acute utilization for both CKD and ESRD populations and a more than 25% reduction in emergency department utilization for both CKD and ESRD populations."

Several patients have benefited from this approach, including one female patient who was predicted to have a 57% chance of kidney failure within two years. After more than a year of "watch and wait," the patient avoided a crash into dialysis through a high-touch care team coordinating between her nephrologist and primary care physician. They addressed her concerns and engaged her in appropriate treatment.

"Separately, a 36-year-old patient had acquired 16 hospital stays in two years with frequent readmissions and declining health," Dredge recalled. "This patient has since had only one emergency department visit and zero readmissions, reducing inpatient days by about 14 times her previous usage."

ADVICE FOR OTHERS

"As health systems move into population health and value-based contracts, analytics are needed to identify patient populations and follow them through their care journey," Dredge advised. "When selecting a partner, ensure there is alignment on goals and metrics.

"Understand what the healthcare organization should own versus accomplish with a partner," he continued. "Controlling all aspects of care through internal resources can stifle innovation. SSM Health's transformation team recognizes that a partner delivering an external, dedicated focus with tight integration and collaboration can speed innovation and raise all involved together for a better experience."

This leads to a virtuous cycle of innovation where the more successful one is at making progress, the faster they can go, he added.

"SSM Health turned to a partner so it could dedicate its efforts to what the health system does well, which is providing quality care to its communities," he concluded. "The partnership applied a dedicated focus to informing care that is innovating kidney care."

Twitter:@SiwickiHealthITEmail the writer:bsiwicki@himss.orgHealthcare IT News is a HIMSS Media publication.

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