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Prof. Insik Shin from KAIST gives a colloquium lecture on cyber physical systems
Author
Administrator
Registration Date
2016-10-21
Hits
130
CS students were ranked at 3rd in the 1st round of a Makeathon event
SUNY Korea, October 2016 Udara Silva, Jin Woo Han, Nuwan Werellagama, and Charis Asante-Agyei attended the 2016 Makeathon in Seoul, to formulate and present their idea. Their aim is to make an Android application to foster interaction between Koreans and Foreigners overcoming cultural and language barriers. They have won 3rd place for funding! 2016 Makeathon Event
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Registration Date
2016-10-07
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142
SUNY Korea CS Students Win 2nd Prizes at Game Jam 2016
SUNY Korea, September 8th, 2016 Homin Yoon (CS Ph.D. Program) and Jinwoo Choi (CS Undergraduate Program) were both ranked the 2nd in the GameJam 2016 event (8/24~26) organized by the Department of Creative IT Engineering at POSTECH in collaboration with HKU, Netherlands. Teamed with other domestic and international students, they achieved the feat based on the skills learned in mobile game development. Congratulations, Homin and Jinwoo!!
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Administrator
Registration Date
2016-09-08
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74
CS Junior Faculty Win Prestigious Young Researcher Program Grants
SUNY Korea, Jan 20, 2016 SUNY Korea scored two MEST Young Researcher Program Grants, for a hit rate of 100%. Please join in to congratulate Prof. Sael Lee and Prof. David Choi for having accomplished this amazing feat. This program grant is awarded to young researchers to help them become the future research leaders by supporting creative research ideas. The acceptance rate for this prestigious grant was 27%. Prof. Sael Lee is supported for "Development of Multi-layer Network Analysis Methods for Integrative Analysis Algorithms of Bio-Clinical Data." She aims to study multi-layer network that will help in storing and inferring knowledge from various sources of high dimensional data by developing data structure and analysis methods for the multi-layer networks. Her research can be applied in various contexts, including bio-clinical data analysis for increasing knowledge of disease pathology. David Choi's grant "User-Centered Dynamic Microgrid using Data Science Techniques" targets distributed microgrids to provide even more efficient, reliable, secure, and user-friendly smart grid. He aims to build user-centered dynamic microgrids while coping with inherently dynamic in nature of the microgrids and promoting the constructive participation of users. His research will focus on practical applications using electric vehicles and big data.
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Administrator
Registration Date
2016-01-20
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78
German neuroscientist Christian Wallraven from Max Plank Institute and Korea University ...
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Registration Date
2015-12-11
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77
Prof. Jaegul Choo from Korea University gives a colloquium lecture on visual data mining
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Administrator
Registration Date
2015-11-20
Hits
109
David Kasik, Senior Technical Fellow at Boeing Company, visits SUNY Korea
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Administrator
Registration Date
2015-09-17
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77
SUNY Korea was recognized as an NVIDIA GPU Research Center
SUNY Korea, September, 2015 The NVIDIA GPU Research Center at SUNY Korea is headed by Professor Klaus Mueller of SUNY Korea’s Computer Science Department. It supports a wide range of research and education activities that involve CUDA devices and technology. GPU-accelerated computing can tremendously accelerate scientific, analytics, engineering, consumer, and enterprise applications. While a conventional CPU consists of a few cores optimized for sequential serial processing, a GPU has a massively parallel architecture consisting of thousands of smaller, more efficient cores designed for handling multiple tasks simultaneously. One application that uses GPU-technology at SUNY Korea is computed tomography (CT) for medical and industrial applications, such as X-ray and ultrasound imaging. Here the speed of GPUs enables the realization of highly compute-intensive iterative schemes for the reconstruction from data acquired in adverse conditions, such as low radiation dose, sparse acquisition, and beam hardening. GPU-accelerated computing also enables the accurate modeling and integration of the underlying imaging physics into the reconstruction process. Another application at SUNY Korea is in the area of visual analytics and data science where GPUs support frameworks for interactive cluster analysis of big data in health informatics, climate science, finance, and economics. GPUs also accelerate parameter learning of optimization algorithms from example data where the high computational performance of GPUs enables an interactive exploration of the search space. A more recent effort is the design of effective visual interfaces to visualize runtime performance and aid in code optimization, in particular nested loop reordering and decomposition using the polyhedral method. These and other research efforts have been widely published by members of the Center in both the domain literature and as CUDA Computing Gems. Almost all students of the Center have used, or are using, GPUs in their research for the purpose of making their software interactive or facilitating otherwise computationally infeasible research. Courses on high performance computing with GPUs are taught at SUNY Korea on a regular basis where students are able to also hone their skills on SUNY Korea’s high-end multi-GPU K20 and K40 Tesla server. NVIDIA has been a pioneer in visual computing. With its invention of the GPU (Graphical Processing Unit) — the engine of modern visual computing — the field has expanded to encompass video games, movie production, product design, medical diagnosis, and scientific research. In 2007, NVIDIA introduced the application programing interface CUDA (Compute Unified Device Architecture) which has allowed software developers to use GPUs for general purpose parallel computing on the desktop. But also supercomputers such as the Titan at Oakridge National Labs which is currently the 2nd fastest supercomputer in the world are using GPUs on a massive scale to accelerate their computations. With its GPU Research Centers and other academic programs NVIDIA seeks to advance parallel computing education and research. Among the current NVIDIA GPU Research Centers are world-class institutions such as University of California at Santa Barbara, Johns Hopkins University, University of Southern California, Duke University, and now also SUNY Korea.
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Administrator
Registration Date
2015-09-07
Hits
86
Professors Pradipata De, David Choi, and Sael Lee Win the Global Advanced Technology Cen...
SUNY Korea, August, 2015 Professors Pradipta De, David Choi, and Sael Lee win the Global Advanced Technology Center project in collaboration with BI MATRIX (a leading business intelligence company in Korea) and Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology. The project aims to build a user-friendly scalable real-time business intelligence platform that can cater to the needs of small medium business. In this 5 year project, the SUNY Korea faculty will contribute in explore novel ways to combine Machine Learning techniques, Internet of Things, and Security and Privacy policies to design and implement an intelligent, efficient and secure BI platform. The Global Advance Technology Center project will promote opportunities to collaborate and complement the capabilities of research organizations with diverse expertise to build a world-class research center.
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Administrator
Registration Date
2015-08-07
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79
Lane Harrison from Tufts University visit SUNY Korea
SUNY Korea, NY, April, 2015
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Registration Date
2015-04-07
Hits
80
Robert Kosara, Research Scientist at Tableau Software, gives a distinguished lecture
SUNY Korea, NY, April, 2015
Author
Administrator
Registration Date
2015-04-07
Hits
89
PhD candidate and ITCCP Scholar Shenghui Cheng presents his research at the IEEE Pacific...
Visual Analytics and Imaging Laboratory (VAI Lab) Computer Science Department, Stony Brook University, NY Improving the Fidelity of Contextual Data Layouts Using a Generalized Barycentric Coordinates Framework Shenghui Cheng, Klaus Mueller Abstract: Contextual layouts preserve the context of the data with the associated attributes (variables). However, their linear mapping causes errors in the layout – similar data points and variable nodes may not map to similar regions, and vice versa. In this paper, we first unify the various data layout schemes and choose the Generalized Barycentric Coordinates (GBC) plot as the standard way to describe them. Second, we propose three algorithms – distance spaced layout, iterative error reduction, and force directed adjustment – to reduce the layout error of variables to variables, data to variables and data to data, respectively. We find that the combination of these three algorithms can yield large improvements in the layout error and so achieve a more comprehensive layout. Third, we describe an interface, the GBC Error Explorer, which allows users to explore the error using a variety of visualization schemes combined with some interactions. Teaser: The interface of our system with various facilities linked together. The contectual layout is shown on the right, and a parallel coordinate display shows the raw data on the bottom. The control panel in the center allows users to control the layout's parameters. The two remaiining displays visualize different types of layout errors to inform the parameter settings. Video: Watch it to get a quick overview: https://youtu.be/UdDLfPIsPWw Paper: S. Cheng, K. Mueller, "Improving the Fidelity of Contextual Data Layouts Using a Generalized Barycentric Coordinates Framework,"Proc. Pacific Vis, pp. 295-302, Hangzhou, China, April, 2015. ppt pdf Funding: NSF grant IIS-1117132
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Registration Date
2015-04-03
Hits
92
SUNY Korea Students Participated in the Game Jam Netherlands-Korea 2014
SUNY Korea, October, 2014 SUNY Korea students Darius Coelho, Ayush Kumar and Wonbo Shim attended the Game Jam Netherlands-Korea 2014 held at POSTECH in Pohang. They teamed up with three other POSTECH students to form 'SUNTECH'. Game jams typically tend to have a theme and a time limit, and the theme for this jam was 'Wellness and Sport' and the time limit was 48 hours. This year's Game Jam was unique as it had the participants create 'Applied-Games' (designed for a primary purpose other than pure entertainment) for the first time ever. Also various Korean companies presented their products/needs hoping that the participants would create a game that suits their needs. SUNTECH created an applied game that addressed an issue faced by the Korean company FEMTOFAB and at the same time their game tackled the common problem in Korea of people spending too much time sitting in an office chair. The issue faced by FEMTOFAB was that they have a device called HaPee that can analyze a urine sample and produce a report that is very similar to a blood report, but they needed people to drink water and visit the restroom regularly. SUNTECH's solution was an applied game combined with a notification system and included a social element as well. The notification system would ask users to drink water or go to the restroom at regular intervals of time and users would earn points for performing the activities thereby addressing the issue faced by FEMTOFAB. The users could then use these points to challenge their friends to a maze game. The maze game was kinect based and had the user perform leg and hand motions to move through a maze. Completing the maze faster than your challenger earned you bonus points and failure to attempt a challenge would make you lose points. The gesture based maze games addressed the issue of people spending too much time in a chair. The teams had to demo their game to four judges and make a 7 minute presentation as to what issues the games address and how it address those issues. After 48hr of hard work the judges rewarded SUNTECH's effort with the second place at the Game Jam and an opportunity to continue developing their mini game into a full-fledged game.
Author
Administrator
Registration Date
2014-10-31
Hits
98
Bitcoin Evangelist Roger Ver Visits SUNY Korea
SUNY Korea, NY, February, 2014 Bitcoin is a controversial yet technically interesting currency. Known as crypto-currency, a bitcoin can be computationally mined, where the cost for mining is (at least theoretically) tied to its worth. Bitcoins can be obtained in exchange for regular money, products, and services. Consumers can send and receive bitcoins electronically using a bitcoin wallet on a PC, mobile device, or a web app. Roger Ver, a well-known Bitcoin celebrity, came to visit SUNY Korea on July 7, 2014, and told us all about it. Roger has been a bitcoin enthusiast since its early beginnings and, as an angel investor, has helped quite a few bitcoin startup companies succeed. In his exciting 90 minute talk, he explained many of bitcoin’s concepts and advantages and also told a few lessons on entrepreneurship itself. He then demonstrated to a packed audience of stunned listeners how easy it is to use bitcoins for transferring money across the world and buying products online.
Author
Administrator
Registration Date
2014-02-07
Hits
83
The First SUNY Korea Human-Computer Interaction Talent Workshop
SUNY Korea, NY, February, 2014 Over 3 months, in the Fall semester 2013, 21 SUNY Korea freshman students passionately prototyped 10 new web and smart phone app technologies that sought to bring people joy rather than frustration. This workshop showcased the fruits of their diligent work. The design projects were done as part of the SUNY Korea Human Computer Interaction (HCI) course (taught by SUNY Korea Computer Science Professor and Department Chair Klaus Mueller who comes to us from Stony Brook University, NY). In 15 minute presentations, each student or student team presented their entire HCI design pipeline – need finding, story boarding, prototyping, skeletal implementation, user testing. The event was kicked off by a wonderful keynote of well-known HCI expert – Prof. Jinwook Seo from Seoul National University. The projects included apps for smart shopping, informed dining, smart laundry scheduling, health management, digital piggy bank, mindmap, travel manager, and a music interface. A jury of 5 SUNY Korea graduate students and professors had a hard time to decide which team would win the first “Hottest New SUNY Korea HCI Talent” Award – an almost 1-to-1 replica of the famous Academy Award also known as OSCAR. After long deliberations, the “Hottest New SUNY Korea HCI Talent 2013” award winners were Youngjin Im and Nursultan Kamchybekov for their digital piggy bank app. Runner-ups were Minsoo Park and Sungkyum Park for their smart shopping app, and third place went to Phit Ahn for her smart laundry app.
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Registration Date
2014-02-07
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81
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