The nano age is upon us. With nanoscale advancements we are reimagining health and life sciences, energy, computing, information technology, manufacturing, and quantum science. Nano is not a specific technology. It does not belong to a particular industry or discipline, it is, rather, a revolutionary way of understanding and working with matter, and it is the key to launching the next innovation age…the nano age.
Sili Deng d'Arbeloff Career Development Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering
Culture is a potent force in shaping individual and group behavior, yet it has received relatively little attention in the context of financial risk management and the recent financial crisis. In this talk, Professor Lo will present a brief overview of the role of culture and ethics according to psychologists, sociologists, and economists, and then propose a specific framework for analyzing culture in the context of financial practices and institutions in which three questions are addressed: (1) What is culture?; (2) Does it matter?; and (3) Can it be changed?
Video can be used as the input data for the real-time monitoring of machines, products, or processes to which sensors cannot be affixed. Industrial and scientific monitoring applications, compared to other video sources, such as those from surveillance, broadcast, mobile robotics, social media, or entertainment, can often be engineered and structured. Yet, applications of video-based instrumentation in industrial, manufacturing, and scientific experimentation environments are not extensively addressed by the computer vision community.
We discuss the needs, challenges, and recent success in deploying real-time, data-science enabled techniques to efficiently reduce the complexity and dimensionality of raw video data to extract actionable information for real-time feedback and process control, defect detection, and wear and degradation related for factories and the factory subsystem.
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