Category Archives: Events

Technical Seminar – November 15, Bossone 302, 1-2 pm

Category : Past Events

 WHAT CAN ENSEMBLE OF CLASSIFIERS DO FOR YOU?

From the Signal Processing and Pattern Recognition Laboratory at Rowan University, comes a crash course on ensemble based adaptive intelligent systems like no other. What can ensemble systems do for you? How about the ability of analyzing large volumes of data with modest computing resources, partitioning large problems into smaller solvable tasks, analyzing data with missing features, predicting the confidence of an automated decision maker, avoiding model overfitting when you have very little data, incremental learning of new knowledge from streaming data without retaining or memorizing old data, learning new knowledge and knowing what to forget, when to forget and when to remember what you had forgotten, dealing with concept drift and learning from data when the data characteristics change over time – learning the rules when the rules are constantly changing, fusion of heterogeneous data sources for intelligent decision making, learning from grossly unbalanced data, proving that the collective decision of many only mildly intelligent people is statistically better than that of one very smart person, applying these concepts to early diagnosis of neurological disorders, reading someone’s thoughts, controlling devices using your thoughts via brain-machine interface. Not enough? Ok, how about giving you the ability to win $1,000,000? And, for that, … well, you will just have to come to this talk to find out how.

SPEAKER:
Robi Polikar, Ph.D. Professor,
Electrical and Computer Engineering, Rowan
University, Glassboro, NJ

Robi Polikar received his B.Sc. degree in electronics and telecommunications engineering from Istanbul Technical University, Istanbul, Turkey in 1993, and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees, both co-majors in biomedical engineering and electrical engineering, from Iowa State, in 1995 and in 2000, respectively. In 2001 he joined Electrical and Computer Engineering at the then newly established College of Engineering of Rowan University, in Glassboro, NJ, where he established the Signal Processing and Pattern Recognition  Laboratory (SPPRL). In 2003, he received the National Science Foundation’s CAREER award – for developing incremental learning algorithms from streaming data. In 2009 he received a new grant from NSF to continue his work on developing algorithms that can also learn in nonstationary environments, even for severely imbalanced datasets. Most recently, he has expanded this work – supported by a new (2013) NSF grant – to semi-supervised and unsupervised learning in initially labeled environments. His current area of research interest includes adaptive intelligent systems and their various novel applications, such as incremental learning, nonstationary learning, data fusion, imbalanced data and the missing feature problem in automated decision making. He is also working on applying novel machine learning algorithms to biomedical applications, such as early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease, brain-computer interface, and bioinformatics. He teaches upper level undergraduate and graduate courses in wavelet theory, pattern recognition, neural networks, signal processing, and biomedical systems at Rowan. In 2012 he was awarded the Professional Progress in Engineering Award by Iowa State University, recognizing an outstanding alumnus in midcareer. He is a senior member of IEEE, and an Associate Editor for IEEE Transactions on Neural Networks and Learning Systems, for which he recently guest edited a special issue on learning in nonstationary and evolving environments. He is also a program evaluator for Accreditation Board for Engineering Technology (ABET).

Preprints / reprints of his papers, and more information on his research and teaching interests can be found at http://users.rowan.edu/~polikar.

 

 


Drexel IEEE Graduate (DIG) Forum’s Fifth Annual Research Symposium

Category : Past Events

Our annual research symposium is around the corner and we have some exciting events for the students. The symposium will include three excellent talks from prestigious faculties on a three very interesting topics. Another highlight of the event will be student research poster session where graduate students will showcase their on going research. We are also giving away prizes to the top three posters. Registration begins at 9.30 AM and we will have lunch at 12.30 PM. We will finally conclude the day with a reception at 5.00 PM.

Please see the information below and read the submitted abstracts here.




IEEE Distinguished Seminar – “Novel Optoelectronics Devices for Future Radar and Communication Systems”

Category : Events

20070926_Drexel

Drexel IEEE Graduate Forum invites all interested student to attend our distinguished seminar speaker Dr. Daniel Dolfi. Details regarding his talk and his bio can be found below.

Novel Optoelectronics Devices for Future Radar and Communication Systems
By Dr. Daniel Dolfi
Thales Research and Technology, Palaiseau, France

Thursday September 27, 2012
10:30-11:30 AM, Bossone 302

Abstract: Thales Research & Technology (TRT) is a basic research of Thales, one of the leading defense electronics and aerospace companies in the world. Basic research are conducted in four research centers in France, UK, the Netherlands, and Singapore. TRT Physics is involved with a variety of fundamental problems in physics that are finding applications in future Radar, Defense Electronics, and Communication systems. This talk first provides an overview of current activities at TRT- Physics with emphasis on nanomagnetism and spintronics, high temperature superconductors for filters, sensors, and stable oscillators, nanoelectronics, carbon nano-tubes for field emission in both RF and X rays, applications of quantum physics in cold atoms on chip and magnetometry, nano-structured based devices for photonic integrated circuits, fiberbased high power laser sources and optical parametric oscillators for RF applications in Lidar and active imaging. Finally this talk focuses on recent developments in opto-electronic devices for applications of processing of microwave signals up to THz that finds many applications in defense electronics.

Daniel Dolfi Graduated from the “Ecole Supérieure d’Optique”, Orsay, (1986), received the PhD degree from University Paris XI Orsay (1993) and the “Habilitation à Diriger des Recherches” in 2008. He joined Thomson-CSF Corporate Research Laboratory (now TRT-France), in 1986 where he is currently Director of the Physics Dept. of TRT. His main research interests include optoelectronic generation and processing of microwave and THz signals, non-linear optics in fibers, opto-electronic devices (down to nano-scale) and sub-systems (e.g. sensors), and active optronic systems (lidars and imaging systems). Dr Dolfi has about 70 publications in refereed journals, about 130 communications in international conferences (20 of them invited) and about 60 registered patents. He is Fellow of European Optical Society (EOS) and Optical Society of America (OSA).