The next talk in the 2010-2011 STEP Lecture Series will be given by Prof. Richard Garfield on Thursday, November 11th at 6:30pm Pakistan Standard Time.  Prof. Garfield is the Henrik H. Bendixen Clinical Professor of International Nursing at the Columbia University‘s Mailman School of Public Health.

The talk will be streamed live and a brief Q&A session will follow the talk. Undergraduate and graduate students inwfp survey report all disciplines and especially those enrolled in public health related programs, people involved with flood-relief efforts, and government and non-government organizations interested in flood-relief are strongly encouraged to attend.

Title: Determining Humanitarian Needs after Pakistan Floods

Where: Air University, AKU, FAST-NU Islamabad, IBA-Karachi, IMS Peshawar, and LUMS.

When: November 11th, 2010, 6:30-7:30pm Pakistan Standard Time (8:30-9:30am EDT).

Slides, WFP report, Video of the talk

Abstract:

The worst flooding in Pakistan’s history has left over 2,000 people dead and an estimated 15 to 20 million displaced, according to the United Nations – a total that exceeds the combined number of people displaced by the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, the 2005 Kashmir earthquake and the 2010 earthquake in Haiti. During the last two weeks in August, Prof. Richard Garfield, the Henrik H. Bendixen Professor of Clinical International Nursing and Clinical Population and Family Health, helped coordinate the analysis of field surveys in four of the most severely affected provinces in Pakistan to determine short and long term needs for health, water and sanitation, nutrition, agriculture, livelihoods, shelter, and issues affecting women. This ‘combined needs assessment’ is an effort by the international community to jointly set priorities. The data is being used by the U.N. and other organizations. The project involved teams of researchers who fanned out across the country to interview flood victims in 380 locations in the provinces of Gilgit Baltistan, Punjab, Sindh, and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Researchers spoke to refugees living in camps, damaged homes, and spontaneous settlements. From start to finish, the entire process in Pakistan took 20 days.  Preliminary results were presented in Pakistan to U.N. Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, Valerie Amos, on her second day on the job.

Dr. Garfield previously took part in a similar effort in Myanmar and is evaluating a similar survey process done earlier this year in Haiti for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.

Bio:

Richard_Garfield_articleRichard Garfield, DrPH is the Henrik H. Bendixen Clinical Professor of International Nursing and the Director of the PAHO/WHO Collaborating Center in Advanced Practice Nursing. He received a doctorate from Columbia University School of Public Health. Dr. Garfield is a public health/community health nurse with expertise in epidemiology and international health. His research interests include community health promotion among minorities, the effects of wars on civilian populations, and the impact of economic embargoes on health and well- being. Dr. Garfield chairs the human rights committee of the American Public Health Association.

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Acknowledgments: Special thanks to Higher Education Commission of Pakistan (HEC) for facilitating the video broadcast of this talk.

The first talk of the 2010-2011 STEP Lecture Series will be given by Walter Bender on Friday, October 15th at 5:30pm Pakistan Standard Time. Walter is founder of Sugar Labs and has served as President of One Laptop per Child for Software and Content, and as an Executive Director for MIT Media Lab. The title of the talk is Learning to Learn. The talk will be streamed live and a brief Q&A session will follow the talk. Undergraduate and graduate students in all disciplines, and government and non-government organizations interested in education are strongly encouraged to attend.

Title: Learning to Learn

Where: Air University, FAST-NU Islamabad, GIK, IMS Peshawar, LUMS, MCS, and NUST SEECS, Virtual University.

When: October 15th, 2010, 5:30-7:30pm Pakistan Standard Time (8:30-10:30am EDT).

Poster of the talk

Slides, Video of the talk

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Abstract: The Sugar learning platform is a free software project that is being widely adopted for use in both formal and informal science education settings around the world. Sugar is designed to promote collaborative learning through activities that encourage critical thinking. Designed from the ground up especially for children, Sugar offers an alternative to traditional office-desktop, increases the likelihood that computation will be used as a critical-thinking tool in the context of open-ended exploration and discovery, going beyond the use of the computer as a tool of instruction. It is the core component of a worldwide effort to provide every child with equal opportunity for a quality education.

The Sugar learning platform is grounded in almost forty years of university research in the area of technology and learning and research specific to computers in the classroom. Members of the partnership team have worked closely with intellectual leaders, such as Seymour Papert, Marvin Minsky, Alan Kay, and Lea Fagundes. This unique opportunity to create a large-scale embodiment of their ideas, previously realized only in small-scale pilot projects. It is of great value to the field of education science and a great opportunity to engage students and faculty in a global research program.

Lecture goals:
The Sugar software is maintained by a community of volunteers (educators and engineers) working with the non-profit Sugar Labs foundation, a member project of the Software Freedom Conservancy. Through the establishment of a Sugar Labs in Pakistan, we will directly engage science and engineering students and faculty at the leading Pakistani universities in furthering the development of Sugar; specifically, university students will engage in purposeful projects while advancing their own research and education. At the same time, we will be establishing the basis of a software development community within Pakistan that is focused on science education. Our long-term goal is a sustainable ecosystem of development and deployment within Pakistan, with rich ties to the international free-software development community. Within that ecosystem we expect to raise the next generation of scientists and engineers in Pakistan and have a significant impact on the skills and attitudes to creativity and problem-solving that these young learners develop. Expected outcomes of the program include the creation of new jobs and local opportunities for entrepreneurship that will open up from services in porting, testing, deployment, training, and support of the Sugar learning platform.

WalterBenderBio: Walter Bender is technologist and researcher who has made important contributions in the field of electronic publishing, media, and technology for learning. Bender is on leave as a Senior Research Scientist at the MIT Media Lab which he led as executive director between 2000 and 2006. More recently, Bender served as president of One Laptop per Child for Software and Content where he coordinated the development of software and content including the Sugar interface for the XO-1 Children’s Machine computer. After leaving OLPC in 2008, Bender founded Sugar Labs to continue development of Sugar.

Acknowledgments: Special thanks to Higher Education Commission of Pakistan (HEC) for facilitating the video broadcast of this talk.

Academic colloquia and lectures are an integral part of any university environment as they help spread new ideas and facilitate interaction between researchers and students. Read the rest of this entry »

2010_STEPTalksPoster

The next talk in the STEP Lecture Series will be given by Prof. Jeannette Wing, President’s Professor of Computer Science in the Computer Science Department at Carnegie Mellon University, on Friday, April 23rd at 5:00pm PST. The title of the talk is Computational Thinking. The talk will be streamed live and a brief Q&A session will follow the talk. Undergraduate and graduate students with non-engineering backgrounds are also encouraged to attend.

Title: Computational Thinking

Where: Air University, FAST-NU Islamabad, IMS Peshawar, LUMS, and NUST SEECS.

When: April 23rd, 2010, 5-7pm Pakistan Standard Time (8-10am EDT).

Online video of the talk

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Help us publicize! Download our poster.

Abstract: My vision for the 21st Century: Computational thinking will be a fundamental skill used by everyone in the world. To reading, writing, and arithmetic, let’s add computational thinking to every child’s analytical ability. Computational thinking involves solving problems, designing systems, and understanding human behavior by drawing on the concepts fundamental to computer science. Thinking like a computer scientist means more than being able to program a computer. It requires the ability to abstract and thus to think at multiple levels of abstraction. In this talk I will give many examples of computational thinking, argue that it has already influenced other disciplines, and promote the idea that teaching computational thinking can not only inspire future generations to enter the field of computer science but benefit people in all fields.
Jeanette Wing

Bio: Dr. Jeannette M. Wing is the President’s Professor of Computer Science in the Computer Science Department at Carnegie Mellon University. She received her S.B. and S.M. degrees in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science in 1979 and her Ph.D. degree in Computer Science in 1983, all from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. From 2004-2007, she was Head of the Computer Science Department at Carnegie Mellon. Currently on leave from CMU, she is the Assistant Director of the Computer and Information Science and Engineering Directorate at the National Science Foundation.

Professor Wing’s general research interests are in the areas of specification and verification, concurrent and distributed systems, programming languages, and software engineering. Her current focus is on the foundations of trustworthy computing.

Professor Wing was or is on the editorial board of twelve journals. She has been a member of many advisory boards, including: the Networking and Information Technology (NITRD) Technical Advisory Group to the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Tecbnology (PCAST), the National Academies of Sciences’s Computer Science and Telecommunications Board, ACM Council, the DARPA Information Science and Technology (ISAT) Board, NSF’s CISE Advisory Committee, Microsoft’s Trustworthy Computing Academic Advisory Board, the Intel Research Pittsburgh’s Advisory Board, and the Sloan Research Fellowships Program Committee. She is a member of AAAS, ACM, IEEE, Sigma Xi, Phi Beta Kappa, Tau Beta Pi, and Eta Kappa Nu. Professor Wing is an AAAS Fellow, ACM Fellow, and IEEE Fellow.

Acknowledgments: Special thanks to Higher Education Commission of Pakistan (HEC) for facilitating the video broadcast of this talk.

The next talk in the STEP Lecture Series will be given by Dr. Derek Chiou on Thursday, March 25, 2010 at 5:00pm PST. The talk has been organized in collaboration with various universities in Pakistan and will be streamed live. A brief Q&A session will follow the talk. Undergraduate and graduate students with non-engineering backgrounds are also encouraged to attend.

Title: Fast and Accurate Simulation of Computer Systems

Where:
Air University
AKU-IED
BZU Multan
FAST-NU Islamabad

IMS Peshawar
LUMS
NUST SEECS

UET Taxilla

University of Sargodha
SZABIST

When: March 25, 2010, at 5:10-6:25pm Pakistan Standard Time (7:10-8:25am CDT)

Online video of the talk

Abstract:

Simulators of computers are essential starting from the architectural phase, through implementation and verification, and even during software development and tuning.  However, building computer simulators that are both fast and accurate has traditionally been a challenging problem that has recently been further aggravated by the proliferation of multicore processors. In this talk, I will describe the FPGA-Accelerated Simulation Technologies (FAST) methodology for building fast, parallelized, full-system, cycle-accurate-capable simulators of multicore target systems.  Our current implementation of a FAST simulator runs on a multicore+FPGA platform and simulates a multicore x86 system running unmodified Linux.  Simulation speeds are roughly 10MIPS range in cycle-accurate mode and significantly faster at lower accuracy.  The simulator is currently being augmented with power estimation and reliability modeling capabilities at the same simulation speeds.

Bio:
DerekChiou
Derek Chiou is an assistant professor at the University of Texas at Austin.  His research areas are high performance computer simulation, computer architecture, parallel computing, Internet router architecture and network processors.  Before UT, Dr. Chiou was a system architect for five years at Avici Systems, a manufacturer of terabit core routers.  Dr. Chiou received his Ph.D., S.M. and S.B. degrees in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from MIT. His research is supported by a DOE Career award, an NSF CAREER award, NSF and SRC awards as well as donations from Intel, IBM, Xilinx, Freescale, Altera, and VMWare.

Acknowledgments: STEP is very grateful to Dr. Shahab Baqai at LUMS for his continued support and help in organizing the lecture series. Special thanks to Higher Education Commission of Pakistan (HEC) for facilitating the video broadcast of this talk.

WiTricity TalkThe third talk of the STEP Lecture Series will be given by Dr. Aristeidis Karalis on Thursday, February 25, 2010 at 6:00pm PST. The talk has been organized in collaboration with Air University, FAST-NU Islamabad, LUMS Department of Computer Science, MCS, and NUST School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (SEECS), and will be streamed live. A brief Q&A session will follow the talk. Undergraduate and graduate students with non-engineering backgrounds are also encouraged to attend.

Title: Wireless Electricity

Where:
Air University
FAST-NU Islamabad
LUMS Department of Computer Science (Room 10-404 SSE),
MCS
NUST SEECS


When: February 25, 2010, at 6:00 pm Pakistan Standard Time (8:00am EST)

Abstract:
Consider the plethora of modern devices which vitally depend on short-lived, environmentally unfriendly, costly batteries or whose performance and mobility are restricted by their attachment to a cord. Imagine now a world where these apparati can instead receive their power wirelessly. We have developed a technology, based on STRONGLY-COUPLED resonant induction, enabling power (from mW to KW) to be transmitted across medium-range distances (from cm to m) very efficiently (typically from 20% to 95%). The exact achievable distance depends on the size of the device, the targeted efficiency (maximum tolerated wasted power) and, in general, the particular application. Moreover, far-field radiation interference can be employed to further increase the achievable efficiency or reduce the produced radiation. Our power transmission technology utilizes low frequencies and the harmless magnetic field, thus it can comply with international safety regulations. This technology has been implemented into real-world electronic devices by WiTricity Corporation, and relevant pre-recorded demos will be shown.

Bio:

Karalis AristeidisAristeidis Karalis is a founder of WiTricity Corp. (2007), and was a member of the MIT research team that developed both the theoretical basis and experimental validation of this novel method for wireless energy transfer. Aristeidis is a Post-Doctoral Associate in the Research Laboratory of Electronics at MIT. He received his Sc.D. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from MIT in 2008. He received his M.Sc. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from MIT and his B.Sc. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the National Technical University of Athens, Greece. Aristeidis is a co-author of nine scientific articles and six patents. He was awarded the Paris Kanellakis Fellowship and the Ioannis S. Latsis Fellowship as a student at MIT.

Acknowledgments: STEP is very grateful to Dr. Shahab Baqai at LUMS for his continued support and help in organizing the lecture series. Special thanks to Higher Education Commission of Pakistan (HEC) for facilitating the video broadcast of this talk.

In collaboration with IEEE-LUMS and IEEE-NUCES as part of IEEE-week, STEP has organized talks by Saad Fazil and Kellee Santiago on February 7th, 2010. The talks will be streamed live and a brief Q&A session will follow each talk.

The talks will be aimed at a general audience. Undergraduate and graduate students with non-engineering backgrounds are also encouraged to attend.

Title: Technology Blogging and Entrepreneurship

Where: LUMS Department of Computer Science, Saeed  Saigol Auditorium .
When: Sunday, February 7, 8:00am Pakistan Standard Time

Abstract:

Whether you want to blog as a professional, grow in your current job, start a technology company, or even influence policy — effective blogging and know-how about blogosphere can play a critical role in your success. This talk will primarily look at blogging as a career and blogging as a means to entrepreneurship. I will discuss what you need to do to be a successful technology blogger and how you can use blogging to start and sell your business

Bio:fazil1150x150.jpg

Saad Fazil does freelance writing for VentureBeat, where he focuses on deep analysis of emerging trends in the industry. He is the founder of Whizner Consulting, a technology strategy consulting firm. Prior to consulting, he held business analyst, product management, and sales consultant positions at Kayak.com, Oracle, and Alcatel. He received his MBA from MIT Sloan School of Management. He blogs at IT Valley and tweets at @sfrocks.

 


Title: Design Your Passion

Where: LUMS Department of Computer Science,  Saeed Saigol Auditorium.
When: Sunday, February 7, 9:00am Pakistan Standard Time

Abstract: flower-game-screenshot-1

Games will be the most prevalent medium of the 21st Century – more than radio, film, and television combined in the 20th. So as leaders in this medium, what do you hope to accomplish, and how can you get there?  In this talk, Kellee Santiago (President & Co-Founder) will discuss thatgamecompany‘s approach to developing innovative games, and will explain why they hope that all of you will join them in doing so. She will walk through TGC’s process from first approaching a concept through prototyping and execution, taking examples from their previous PSN release, “Flower.”

Bio:kellee_santiago

Kellee Santiago is President and Co-Founder of thatgamecompany (TGC). TGC’s goal is to make video games that communicate different emotional experiences, and expand the communicative possibilities of games. Kellee graduated from the MFA Interactive Media program at the University of Southern California School of Cinematic Arts where her research focused on game design, interactive narrative, and physical and gestural interfaces for digital media. While at USC she teamed up with fellow student Jenova Chen to develop the student-created game, “Cloud.” The game went on to become critically acclaimed, after which the two decided to found their own studio, thatgamecompany, and landed a three game deal with Sony Computer Entertainment America, Inc. to develop downloadable games for Playstation Network. Their first two commercial releases, “flOw”, and “Flower,” went on to become award-winning and two of the top downloaded games on PSN.

Kellee is also a TED2010 Fellow.

The second talk of the STEP Lecture Series will be given by Dr. Sonesh Surana on November 12, 2009 at 8:30pm PST. The talk has been organized in collaboration with LUMS Department of Computer Science, NUST School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (SEECS), and Air University, and will be streamed live. A brief Q&A session will follow the talk. The talk will be aimed at a general audience. Undergraduate and graduate students with non-engineering backgrounds are also encouraged to attend.

Title: Enabling Sustainable Rural Wireless Telemedicine

Where: LUMS Department of Computer Science, Auditorium A-16, NUST SEECS, Air University
When: November 12, 8:30pm Pakistan Standard Time (7:30am Pacific daylight time)

Abstract:
With one ophthalmologist per over 100,000 people in India, there is a critical need to improve the utilization of eye doctors. In this talk, we discuss our work in deploying a long distance wireless network that enables high quality video-based telemedicine between rural eye clinics and centrally located doctors at the Aravind Eye Hospitals. In particular, we take a close look at the issues of financial and operational sustainability.

Bio:Dr. Sonesh Surana
Dr. Sonesh Surana focuses on the design and implementation of low-cost information and communication technologies (ICT) and related power infrastructure for developing regions. He received his PhD in Computer Science with the TIER research group at UC Berkeley in 2009. As part of TIER, he co-developed new WiFi-based long-distance technology enabling inexpensive targeted rural broadband coverage, and demonstrated high bandwidth point-to-point links as long as 380 Kms, a new world record. He also led the deployment of this technology for a live video-based rural telemedicine network at the Aravind Eye Hospital in South India, managing a range of non-profit, government, university and private stakeholders. This network, now financially and operationally sustainable, provides coverage to 500,000 people in areas with no other option for eye care. It has enabled over 100,000 remote patient examinations in three years, and 20,000 of those patients have received their sight back due to early diagnosis. He has done ICT work in Romania, Rwanda, India and Venezuela. He advises several non-profit development organizations and is also the co-founder of QVSense Inc, a company focused on building photovoltaic power management hardware solutions.

Acknowledgments: STEP is very grateful to Dr. Shahab Baqai at LUMS for his continued support and help in organizing the lecture series. Special thanks to Higher Education Commission of Pakistan (HEC) for facilitating the video broadcast of this talk.

Correction: An earlier version of this post mistakenly posted the time for the talk as 7:30PM Pakistan Standard Time. The correct time for the talk in Pakistan is 8:30PM.

Image credits: http://berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2006/06/06_telemedicine.shtml

STEP Lecture Series is an initiative to bring interactive talks by distinguished researchers, academics, and entrepreneurs to universities in Pakistan via video conferencing. The series aims to help bridge the ‘knowledge divide’ by introducing students in Pakistan to the emerging trends and cutting edge research, and in the process, inspiring these students to take on challenging problems. The talks will also be recorded and made available on STEP website for later viewing.

poster03-thumbThe first talk in this series titled, New Approaches to Modeling and Control of Complex Dynamics, will be given by Dr. Adrien Treuille of Carnegie Mellon University on October 15, 2009 at 7:30 PM Pakistan Standard Time (9:30 AM EDT). The talk will be streamed live to LUMS Department of Computer Science, Mil College of Signals (MCS), and Air University.  Below is the abstract of the talk and a short biography of Dr. Treuille.

Title: New Approaches to Modeling and Control of Complex Dynamics
When: October 15, 2009 at 7:30 PM Pakistan Standard Time.
Where: LUMS Department of Computer Science, Mil College of Signals, and Air University
Abstract: Complex phenomena such as animal morphology, human motion, and large fluid systems challenge even our most sophisticated simulation and control techniques. Read the rest of this entry »

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