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Eight Named to All-ACC Academic Team; Beck Tabbed Scholar … – GoDuke.com

Story Links DURHAM The ACC released the women's tennis All-ACC Academic Team on Wednesday with eight members of the Duke squad receiving honors, while senior Chloe Beck was tabbed the ACC Scholar-Athlete of the Year for the second consecutive year.

Along with Beck on the All-ACC Academic team were Karolina Berankova, Iuliia Bryzgalova, Ellie Coleman, Georgia Drummy, Emma Jackson, Cameron Morra and Brianna Shvets. The eight selections were the most in school history.

A native of Watkinsville, Ga., Beck became the first Blue Devil to be selected ACC Scholar-Athlete of the Year on multiple occasions and is one of only two Duke women's tennis standouts to earn the honor Samantha Harris (2018). Beck is coming off an impressive season in which she became the fourth Duke standout to post 30 or more singles and doubles wins in a season.

Beck collected a 33-5 singles and 30-5 doubles mark, while being ranked as high as No. 2 nationally. She earned ITA National Senior Player of the Year, ITA All-American and advanced to the round of 16 of the NCAA Singles Championship. Beck received All-ACC Academic Team honors for the third straight year.

Drummy and Morra earned All-ACC Academic Team honors for the third year in a row as well, while Coleman and Jackson were named for the second consecutive season. Berankova, Bryzgalova and Shvets earned the accolade for the first time in their career.

The ACC Scholar-Athlete of the Year award was established in September 2007 to be awarded annually to the top junior or senior student-athlete in their respective sports. Academic requirements for selection to the All-ACC Academic Team are a 3.0-grade point average for the previous semester and a 3.0 cumulative average during one's academic career. In addition, student-athletes must compete in at least 50 percent of their team's contests.

To stay up to date with Blue Devils women's tennis, follow the team on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook by searching "DukeWTEN".

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ACC Scholar-Athlete of the YearChloe Beck***, Duke, Sr., PsychologyAll-ACC Academic Women's TeamSophia Edwards, Boston College, Jr., Independent/ BiologyNatalie Eordekian, Boston College, Fr., NeuroscienceLaura Lopez Giese, Boston College, Gr., Sports AdministrationMuskan Mahajan, Boston College, So., FinanceHailey Wilcox, Boston College, Sr., FinanceSophia Hatton, Clemson, Jr., MarketingChristina Mayorova, Clemson, Jr., CommunicationDani Medvedeva, Clemson, Jr., ManagementJenna Thompson**, Clemson, Jr., AccountingLeigh Van Zyl, Clemson, Fr., Pre-BusinessChloe Beck***, Duke, Sr., PsychologyKarolina Berankova, Duke, Jr., International Comparative StudiesIuliia Bryzgalova, Duke, Grad., Master of Management StudiesEllie Coleman**, Duke, So., Environmental SciencesGeorgia Drummy***, Duke, Sr., EconomicsEmma Jackson**, Duke, So., SociologyCameron Morra***, Duke, Grad., Master of Management StudiesBrianna Shvets, Duke, Grad., Master of Management StudiesVic Allen, Florida State, Sr., Sports ManagementAlice Amendola, Florida State, R-So., PsychologyAnna Arkadianou, Florida State, Jr., DieteticsMillie Bissett, Florida State, Fr., Business AdministrationOlympe Lancelot, Florida State, So., Business ManagementKristyna Lavickova, Florida State, Fr., PsychologyKianah Motosono, Florida State, Sr., MBAEllie Schoppe, Florida State, Jr., Exercise PsychologyMila Saric, Florida State, Sr., MBA with concentration in FinanceKylie Blichev**, Georgia Tech, So., BiologyAlejandra Cruz, Georgia Tech, Fr., Industrial EngineeringMonika Dedaj, Georgia Tech, Sr., BusinessRosie Garcia-Gross, Georgia Tech, Sr., BusinessMahak Jain, Georgia Tech, Jr., BusinessCarol Lee**, Georgia Tech, Jr., BusinessKate Sharabura**, Georgia Tech, So., BiologyAndrea Farulla Di Palma, Louisville, Sr., Health & Human Performance-Exercise ScienceSasha Gorchanyuk, Louisville, Sr., CommunicationTyra Richardson, Louisville, So., ChemistryJamilah Snells, Louisville, So., Business AdministrationCiCi XiN, Louisville, Gr., MS Sport AdministrationDaevenia Achong***, Miami, Sr., Master of Science in FinanceAudrey Boch-Collins**, Miami, Jr., CriminologyAlexa Noel, Miami, So., SociologyIsabella Pfennig***, Miami, Jr., EconomicsMaya Tahan**, Miami, Jr., PsychologyReese Brantmeier, North Carolina, Fr., Exercise and Sport ScienceFiona Crawley***, North Carolina, Jr., English and Comparative LitElizabeth Scotty***, North Carolina, Sr., Media and JournalismCarson Tanguilig**, North Carolina, So., Exercise and Sport ScienceReilly Tran**, North Carolina, Jr., NeuroscienceAnika Yarlagadda**, North Carolina, Sr., Exercise and Sport ScienceSophie Abrams**, NC State, Jr., BiologyGina Dittmann, NC State, Jr., Business AdministrationAmelia Rajecki, NC State, Jr., BiologyAbigail Rencheli**, NC State, Jr., PsychologyJulia Andreach**, Notre Dame, Jr., EconomicsCarrie Beckman, Notre Dame, So., FinancePage Freeman***, Notre Dame, Sr., NeuroscienceNibedita Ghosh, Notre Dame, So., EconomicsRylie Hanford, Notre Dame, Fr., FinanceAkari Matsuno, Notre Dame, Fr., Political ScienceBojana Pozder, Notre Dame, Fr., FinanceYashna Yellayi, Notre Dame, Jr., Business AnalyticsZeynep Erman, Syracuse, Sr., PsychologyInes Fonte, Syracuse, Jr., PsychologyShiori Ito**, Syracuse, Jr., Comm and Rhetoric StudiesViktoriya Kanapatskaya, Syracuse, Jr., Entrepreneurship and Emerging Enterprises; Marketing ManagementMiyuka Kimoto, Syracuse, Jr., Human Development and Family SciencePolina Kozyreva**, Syracuse, Sr., Computer ScienceJulia Adams, Virginia, Gr., Educational psychologyMlodie Collard, Virginia, So., KinesiologySara Ziodato, Virginia, Jr., Applied StatisticsHibah Shaikh, Virginia, Jr., Applied StatisticsElaine Chervinsky**, Virginia, So., PsychologyNatasha Subhash***, Virginia, Sr., CommerceAnnabelle Xu, Virginia, Fr., UndeclaredSemra Aksu**, Virginia Tech, So., Business Information TechnologyKatie Andreini, Virginia Tech, Jr., Human Nutrition, Foods & ExerciseCharlotte Cartledge, Virginia Tech, So., Management Consulting & AnalyticsErika Cheng, Virginia Tech, Jr., Civil EngineeringSabina Richtrova, Virginia Tech, Jr., Human DevelopmentAnna Brylin****, Wake Forest, Gr., Master of Science in Business AnalyticsBrooke Killingsworth***, Wake Forest, Jr., Health & Exercise ScienceCasie Wooten**, Wake Forest, Jr., Health & Exercise ScienceMia Ahmad, Wake Forest, Jr., Health & Exercise ScienceMaddie Lynch, Wake Forest, Sr., Politics and International Affairs*Denotes number of All-ACC Academic Team Honors

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International Students Less Likely to Stay in Philadelphia Area After Graduation – Voice of America – VOA News

Jen Kebea, president of Campus Philly, a nonprofit focused on recruitment, engagement and retention of college talent in the Greater Philadelphia area, discussed a 2019 study with Technical.ly, an online news site for technologists and entrepreneurs.

Campus Philly completed a retention data study in 2019 that found the region was retaining 54% of its college students, Kebeba told Technical.ly. However, Kebaba said that within the pool of STEM graduates, some are highly retained, such as those in biology and other life sciences-related subjects; others, such as those in computer science and information technology majors, are less likely to stay in the area.

The more recent report also showed a high number of international students coming to the region to study computer science, Kebea told Technical.ly. Some factors that may draw more international students to Philadelphia, include the variety in higher learning institutions, from community college to the Ivy League, as well as a lower cost of living compared to other U.S. cities, she said.

Anca Scarlat from Romania and Vivek Khimani from India, both computer science majors graduating from Drexel this month, have jobs already lined up, according to the Technical.ly article. Scarlat will work for software engineer at Viasat in San Diego, while Khimani is going to be a software engineer at San Francisco-based security startup Semgrep, the report said.

The story in Technical.ly is written by Sarah Huffman. (June 2023)

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Startup’s Big Battery Can Electrify Your Home and Make the Grid … – CNET

If you're thinking of buying a home battery to protect your house from outages or to cash in on rooftop solar panels, a startup called Lunar Energy this year will bring some new competition to the Tesla Powerwall. The Lunar Battery is a compact, modular design intended to automatically control home appliances and pay for itself as soon as possible.

The battery system monitors factors like weather, power usage and varying electrical rates to control when the system charges the battery, powers your home or pumps power back onto the grid. Lunar Energy plans to start shipping its battery system in volume starting in October.

The product is part of a growing consumer movement -- reinforced by regulatory rules and incentives -- to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide, the greenhouse gas chiefly responsible for climate change. Home electricity, still supplied in large measure by oil and gas power plants, is responsible for about 20% of greenhouse gas emissions in the US. Appliances like oil-burning furnaces and gas-powered stoves and dryers add more. But batteries, especially when paired with rooftop solar panels, can play a role reducing that carbon footprint.

And that's where Lunar Energy is trying to cash in.

"Our North Star is to power homes around the world with endless clean energy," Kunal Girotra, the company's chief executive and founder, said in an interview at Lunar's Mountain View, California, headquarters. "We're not building electric cars, electric planes or batteries for other applications. We're laser focused on decarbonization of homes."

Before Lunar's founding in 2020, Girotra led Tesla Energy, the division that makes its Powerwall home batteries and Megapack equivalent for grid-scale energy storage. And the startup's chief engineer, Kevin Fine, founded Tesla's Powerwall team.

It's complicated to set a price, since Lunar will sell its batteries through Sunrun and other solar panel installers that set their own prices. Costs should range from $20,000 to $30,000 for a 5-kilowatt solar panel system and a 20-kilowatt-hour battery, after the US 30% federal tax credit. That means a range of about $28,000 to $42,000 before the credit.

Lunar will begin sales in California and Hawaii but should be available in Texas, Florida and Puerto Rico within six to nine months. Its batteries can handle hot and cold temperatures, and the company expects to expand to Canada, Japan and Europe.

Solar panels once were exotic but now are more mainstream. Home batteries look to be headed in the same direction. But that's changing as new competitors arrive on the home battery market.

After struggling to keep up with demand for months, market leader Tesla now is offering a $500 rebate on its Powerwalls. Anker, a leader in portable batteries and electronics accessories, is upscaling to whole-home power backup with Solix batteries scheduled for 2024.

And there are new financial incentives to buy a battery. The Inflation Reduction Act offers a 30% tax credit for home batteries. New California rules called Net Energy Metering (NEM) 3.0, which drastically cut the price that electrical utilities pay for rooftop-generated power, made solar panels alone a much worse investment than before. But the combination of solar panels and a battery makes financial sense under NEM 3.0. You can charge your battery during the day and use it to avoid paying steep rates in the evening.

For a California home with a 5kW solar panel system and 20kW Lunar battery, the solar and battery setup should pay for itself over about six to eight years, Girotra said.

Power storage, whether in individual homes or massive grid-scale installations, are key to making the energy transition to renewable, zero-carbon power. Solar panels now produce an overabundance of power during the day in sunny areas but do little to help in the evening when power usage surges. Wind power is intermittent too. Energy storage smooths these ups and downs, helping to avoid the use of expensive "peaker" power plants to handle the evening demand.

And for many, protection against power outages will be an incentive to buy a battery. Power outages increased 78% from 2011 to 2021 in the US, according to research from nonprofit Climate Central. Most of those were triggered by weather that's getting more extreme because of climate change.

Lunar Energy's battery system is a collection of products all designed to work together to ease the integration difficulties posed by batteries. The company expects many customers to have it installed at the same time as they're getting solar panels.

The biggest is the battery itself, a stack of stacked modules that each are about the size of a microwave oven and have 5 kilowatt hours of capacity. Lunar suspects most customers will want between 15 and 25 kilowatt-hours of energy, but it'll offer configurations from 10kWh to 30kWh.

For comparison, each Tesla Powerwall has 13.5kWh of capacity. US households use 29kWh of energy per day on average.

Next is the bridge, a smaller box that links the battery to the grid power, detects outages, and controls specific circuits you might want to power or shut down during an outage.

Then there are "maximizers" that connect to each solar panel to oversee their electrical output. They can be installed with new solar or retrofitted to existing panels, though not likely leased solar.

Lunar Energy's home battery can be mounted indoors or outdoors with a clean, presentable design. Lunar says it's 47% more compact than the average size of rival systems, but it's still bulky.

The Lunar Battery system doesn't require the company's equipment to be attached directly to solar panels, but it's more efficient in that configuration because there's no power loss converting from direct current to alternating current and back.

An app shows you what's happening at any moment -- solar power generation, house power consumption, whether the battery is charging or discharging -- and lets you control the system. Lunar expects most people will set the system up to maximize savings by charging the battery during the day and then using the power or pumping it back onto the grid during the evenings when power rates are often higher.

But you can set the system to work in other modes, for example, setting a reserve level that sequesters enough power to give you peace of mind or keeping the battery charged all the time for maximum protection for power outages.

Lunar's app already can be used to let battery owners participate in virtual power plants, or VPPs, agreements in which a utility pays to be able dispatch some of battery owners' collective power supply when needed.

Solar installer Sunrun, which participated in a $300 million investment in Lunar Energy and which will be a Lunar Battery installer, already has 12 VPP programs, Girotra said.

At the heart of the battery are dozens of thin "pouch" cells made by SK On, another of Lunar's investors. They're mounted in metal trays that are separated by materials that can absorb a lot of heat to cut the risk of runaway fires.

Each module weighs 90 pounds -- hefty, but not nearly as heavy as a bigger battery like a Powerwall. Lunar argues its batteries are easier to install.

The batteries have cooling and heating systems to handle weather extremes, and they can be mounted indoors or outdoors. With IP67 protection against water, they can be submerged up to 3 feet underwater in case of flooding, engineering chief Fine said.

And they come with a warranty that guarantees 70% capacity after 12.5 years.

The app also lets you configure the appliances in your house that should keep power, like refrigerators and broadband routers, and which should be cut off to conserve power, like TVs and washing machines. The system controls such circuits either directly through the bridge or remotely through a connection to an ordinary circuit breaker panel over the house power network.

Later, Lunar plans to add its own electric vehicle charger too, potentially easing a big step in the electrification of our lives.

"We don't have an EV charger today, but that is the next thing on our road map," Girotra said. "Our goal is to say to a homeowner, with this system, you get generation, storage, control and charging through one app."

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Researchers expand ability of robots to learn from videos: Robots … – Science Daily

New work from Carnegie Mellon University has enabled robots to learn household chores by watching videos of people performing everyday tasks in their homes.

The research could help improve the utility of robots in the home, allowing them to assist people with tasks like cooking and cleaning. Two robots successfully learned 12 tasks including opening a drawer, oven door and lid; taking a pot off the stove; and picking up a telephone, vegetable or can of soup.

"The robot can learn where and how humans interact with different objects through watching videos," said Deepak Pathak, an assistant professor in the Robotics Institute at CMU's School of Computer Science. "From this knowledge, we can train a model that enables two robots to complete similar tasks in varied environments."

Current methods of training robots require either the manual demonstration of tasks by humans or extensive training in a simulated environment. Both are time consuming and prone to failure. Past research by Pathak and his students demonstrated a novel method in which robots learn from observing humans complete tasks. However, WHIRL, short for In-the-Wild Human Imitating Robot Learning, required the human to complete the task in the same environment as the robot.

Pathak's latest work, Vision-Robotics Bridge, or VRB for short, builds on and improves WHIRL. The new model eliminates the necessity of human demonstrations as well as the need for the robot to operate within an identical environment. Like WHIRL, the robot still requires practice to master a task. The team's research showed it can learn a new task in as little as 25 minutes.

"We were able to take robots around campus and do all sorts of tasks," said Shikhar Bahl, a Ph.D. student in robotics. "Robots can use this model to curiously explore the world around them. Instead of just flailing its arms, a robot can be more direct with how it interacts."

To teach the robot how to interact with an object, the team applied the concept of affordances. Affordances have their roots in psychology and refer to what an environment offers an individual. The concept has been extended to design and human-computer interaction to refer to potential actions perceived by an individual.

For VRB, affordances define where and how a robot might interact with an object based on human behavior. For example, as a robot watches a human open a drawer, it identifies the contact points -- the handle -- and the direction of the drawer's movement -- straight out from the starting location. After watching several videos of humans opening drawers, the robot can determine how to open any drawer.

The team used videos from large datasets such as Ego4D and Epic Kitchens. Ego4D has nearly 4,000 hours of egocentric videos of daily activities from across the world. Researchers at CMU helped collect some of these videos. Epic Kitchens features similar videos capturing cooking, cleaning and other kitchen tasks. Both datasets are intended to help train computer vision models.

"We are using these datasets in a new and different way," Bahl said. "This work could enable robots to learn from the vast amount of internet and YouTube videos available."

More information is available on the project's website and in a paper presented in June at the Conference on Vision and Pattern Recognition.

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Science for the Future | Endeavors – The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

June 20th, 2023

Marcel Ravidat could never imagine what lay ahead when he and his dog, Robot, came across a foxhole in the southwestern French countryside in 1940. The tunnel was rumored to be a secret passage to a nearby manor, and the curious 18-year-old returned with three friends to investigate further. After days of digging, they found an ancient masterpiece 50 feet underground the cave art of Lascaux. Giant paintings and carvings of animals depict a variety of scenes throughout the chambers.

To data scientists, sites like Lascaux are full of not only artifacts, but raw data. While a spreadsheet of numbers may come to mind when one thinks of data, its definition is much more broad: factual information used as the basis for reasoning, discussion, or calculation.

The people who created the work almost 20,000 years ago lit the cave with fireplaces and sandstone lamps fueled by animal fat. They used their hands, brushes, and hollow bones to apply the paint. Scenes give insight into the fauna of the time, depicting some species that have long been extinct. The red, yellow, and black pigments were prepared by mixing or heating minerals like hematite, iron oxyhydroxides, charcoal, and manganese oxide. The closest known source of this type of manganese oxide was about 150 miles away, leading to the conclusion that these people conducted trade or used supply routes.

All of this is data and it gives valuable insight into the life of humans in Europe during the Upper Paleolithic era.

Data has been here forever. Before we humans were here, there was data about the universe, says Jay Aikat, vice dean of the UNC School of Data Science and Society (SDSS) and research professor of computer science. Its a matter of us paying attention to the data and what were doing with it to advance humankind.

That advancement is at the forefront of SDSS. Launched in 2022, the school is centered around progressing the field of data science and understanding how it impacts society.

As a hub of the technology and biotech industry, the Research Triangle is a fitting spot for a new school of data science. With around 4,000 tech companies, some of the fastest growing segments in the Triangle are in areas like analytics, nanotechnology, and wearables. Giants like Vinfast, Wolfspeed, and Apple as well as a myriad of smaller companies and startups are keen to hire graduates with strong data literacy.

For better or worse, data is pervasive in every area of life. Just like researchers understanding of the life of the Lascaux artists based on artifacts, data scientists can analyze behavior through modern technology. Our physical activity, internet search queries, purchasing and television preferences, and driving tendencies are all tracked through means like smart devices, financial transactions, and security cameras.

Data has a persuasive force. It has the ability to make arguments seem more plausible, more impactful, more strong, says Stan Ahalt, dean of SDSS and professor of computer science. People who use data have a persuasive podium. That podium can be used for very positive things, but it also could be used to distort things in a certain way.

It seems like the saying theres data supporting this has become the new I saw it on TV or I read it on the internet. Because of this persuasive force, Aikat says its imperative that students have a holistic understanding of data.

How we collect the data, how we analyze the data are we thinking about privacy and security as were collecting data? All of those things matter, Aikat says. So, we need to make sure that students are data literate. All our students are data literate.

SDSS will launch its online Master of Applied Data Science program in January 2024. Graduates will gain general skills in programming, statistics, mathematics, and data management, ethics, and governance, as well as specialized skills in machine learning, visualization, and communication. This program will be followed by undergraduate and graduate degrees and a certificate program for working professionals.

The goal is to give students multiple avenues to incorporate data science courses into their degree, according to Aikat. This cross-disciplinary focus also drives how SDSS approaches research.

Were not just a silo as a school, she says. The success of the school really depends on having very strong collaboration with many different units across campus for UNC as a whole to be a data science powerhouse.

The concept for SDSS began moving forward in 2016, when Carolina geneticist and former vice chancellor for research Terry Magnuson charged the first committee to start thinking big about data science. As the founder of UNC-Chapel Hills genetics department, Magnuson has decades of experience building research units, engaging with industry partners, and pushing science policy at local and national levels.

SDSS is currently in discussion with faculty across campus and industry partners to pinpoint research concentrations within the school. Broadly speaking, research will be centered around how data science can be used to solve social issues.

At the core of UNC is Service to the State, and the UNC School of Data Science and Society very much sees that [] as part of our mission, Aikat says. All of the research that were doing is focused on problem areas. How can we take what weve learned and apply that to social problems?

Ahalt stresses that data training is important for students in any field from the hard sciences to art history and everything in between.

Im increasingly convinced that any disciplinary area is going to be impacted by data increasingly as time goes by, Ahalt says. We havent been confronted with the volume of data that is now occurring in many industries. And so, as a consequence, I think any student in any degree is going to make themselves much more future-proofed by having the ability to use data in a very facile way.

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Women pushed into ravine at German castle were recent Illinois college graduates – ABC News

Two U.S. hikers who were attacked in Germany last week had just graduated from the University of Illinois with computer degrees in May

By

TODD RICHMOND Associated Press

June 20, 2023, 1:07 PM ET

3 min read

MADISON, Wis. -- A U.S. hiker who fell to her death during a savage attack in Germany and a friend who tried to protect her had just graduated together from the University of Illinois with computer degrees.

Authorities haven't released the names of anyone involved in the June 14 incident due to German privacy rules. But the Rev. Mark Zhang of Living Water Evangelical Church in Naperville, Illinois, said Tuesday that 21-year-old Eva Liu and her parents attended the church and Liu's parents told him that she had been killed.

It's a very tough situation, Zhang said. Our words are powerless. We just mourn together with them and pray for them. When one family suffers, our whole church suffers.

Weihan Chang of Normal, Illinois, said that his daughter, 22-year-old Kelsey Chang, survived the attack. She was released from a hospital on Sunday and was on a plane bound for home Tuesday. He said he hadn't had a chance to talk with her very much.

She's pretty damaged by the incident, Weihan Chang told The Associated Press. It's life-changing.

According to authorities, Liu and Chang were hiking near Neuschwanstein castle in southern Germany on the afternoon of June 14. The two women encountered a 30-year-old man from Michigan on the path. He lured them onto a trail leading to a viewpoint, according to police. At some point he attacked Liu. When Chang tried to help her the man threw Chang off a cliff. She fell almost 165 feet (50 meters).

The man then apparently tried to sexually assault Liu before throwing her off the cliff as well. Mountain rescue teams were able to reach the women but Liu died in a hospital that night.

The Michigan man left the scene but was arrested nearby. A bystander said the man had scratches across his face but said nothing as police took him away to jail.

The man is suspected of murder, attempted murder and a sexual offense but prosecutors have said it may be three to four months before he's indicted.

University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Associate Chancellor Robin Kaler said in a statement late Monday evening that Liu and Chang both graduated from the school in May. Liu earned a bachelor's degree in computer science. Chang earned a degree in computer engineering.

Our University of Illinois family is mourning the senseless death of Ms. Liu and the attack on (her friend), Kaler said. Both had just graduated in May and should have been able to celebrate such an important accomplishment with the fear of such a tragic outcome.

Barry Gin, another pastor at Living Water Evangelical Church in Naperville, said that Liu was a member of the church's youth group before attending boarding school at the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy in Aurora as a sophomore. Naperville Mayor Scott Wehrli planned a moment of silence in Liu's honor at Tuesday night's city council meeting.

Neuschwanstein, located in southern Bavaria close to Austrias border, is one of Germanys most popular tourist attractions.

It is the most famous of the castles built by King Ludwig II of Bavaria in the 19th century. Construction started in 1869 but was never completed. Ludwig died in 1886.

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CICS Hao Zhang Receives 2023 DARPA Directors Fellowship to … – UMass News and Media Relations

Hao Zhang, associate professor in the Manning College of Information and Computer Sciences, has been awarded the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Directors Fellowship. The prize is awarded to the top performers among recent recipients of the DARPA Young Faculty Award (YFA), a program established to encourage young scientists to pursue high-risk, high-reward research that could result in breakthrough technologies for national security.

We are immensely proud that Professor Zhang has received the highly competitive Directors Fellowship, the first time a UMass Amherst computer science faculty member has received this honor, says Erik Learned-Miller, chair of the faculty in CICS. In his brief time as a robotics faculty member in CICS, he has shown impressive leadership in the area of human-inspired robot adaptation. We look forward to seeing the results of the next phase of his work.

Zhangs 2021 YFA Award provided $495,705 in funding for two years. The Directors Fellowship will provide an additional $406,328 to extend his research for one year.

Zhangs DARPA project, Autonomous Group Introspective Learning and coopEtition (AGILE) for Cross-Capability Multi-Robot Adaptation, uses lessons from the social psychology of humans to help teams of robots with different capabilities work together and adapt to complex situations. To accomplish this, the research team is focusing on two main areas group introspection and cooperative competition, or what Zhang calls coopetition.

Group introspection would allow robots in a team to be aware of all their other team members, so they have a shared situational awareness of the overall teams capabilities. To accomplish that in robots, Zhang and his team are modeling robots in a team as a graph to enable team awareness and are using conditional models that identify backup robots with similar capabilities to replace failed teammates.

The team is realizing coopetition by simultaneously modeling cooperation at the team level and competition at the individual level. Cooperation tackles tasks that are infeasible for individual robots to solve, while competition encourages each robot to perform better and adapt faster.

Zhang, who runs the Human-Centered Robotics Lab at UMass Amherst, says he has been amazed at his teams progress over the past two years.

With the help and enthusiasm of our graduate student team and the support of our DARPA mentor, we have been able to meet our project goal to develop the very first paradigm in robot coopetition, and developed and demonstrated algorithms for introspection, Zhang says.

The project could result in a more resilient and robust manufacturing environment for industries that are currently big adopters of multi-robot systems, including the aerospace industry, he says. Additional applications could include transport, reconnaissance, search and rescue, and wherever else it would be beneficial to have groups of robots perform diverse complex tasks.

The Directors Fellowship will allow us deploy our introspective coopetition approaches in additional trials and start the process of transferring this technology to real-world robot situations by developing a full-stack model that could be used by industry or the Department of Defense, he says. I am grateful for the recognition from DARPA that we are the right track and for the opportunity to see this project through.

In addition to the DARPA YFA and Directors Fellowship, Zhang is the recipient of a National Science Foundation CAREER Award. While an associate professor of computer science at the Colorado School of Mines, he received the universitys Excellence in Research Award. Zhang received his doctorate from the University of Tennessee Knoxville in 2014, his masters from the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2009 and his bachelors from the University of Science and Technology of China in 2006.

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Psychology (H), BA with computer science at SOL – Times of India

NEW DELHI: Delhi Universitys School of Open Learning (SOL) will offer psychology (Hons) from this academic session, giving scope to men to study the subject in DU. The course is mostly offered in womens colleges in DU, barring two co-ed institutes, Zakir Husain Delhi College and Bhim Rao Ambedkar College.Delhi Education Bureau has approved the decision. SOL will also start a BA programme with computer science and offer psychology as a combination subject. For psychology (H), there is no cap on the intake, but for a particular BA programme combination, SOL will admit around 2,000 students. SOL has also been allowed to continue its MBA programme.SOL principal US Pandey said, In regular colleges, psychology (H) is mostly offered at womens institutes. Thats why we thought we should start the course. Unlike previous years, the admission has already started this year and will end on August 31. SOL will refund the entire fees after deducting Rs 500 as administrative charges if a candidate withdraws before the last date of admissions.

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Atlas of human brain blood vessels highlights changes in … – MIT News

Your brain is powered by 400 miles of blood vessels that provide nutrients, clear out waste products, and form a tight protective barrier the blood-brain barrier that controls which molecules can enter or exit. However, it has remained unclear how these brain vascular cells change between brain regions, or in Alzheimers disease, at single-cell resolution.

To address this challenge, a team of scientists from MITs Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL), The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory, and The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard recently unveiled a systematic molecular atlas of human brain vasculature and its changes in Alzheimers disease (AD) across six brain regions, in a paper published June 1 in Nature Neuroscience.

Alzheimer's disease is a leading cause of death, affects one in nine Americans over 65, and leads to debilitating and devastating cognitive decline. Impaired blood-brain barrier (BBB) function has long been associated with Alzheimers and other neurodegenerative diseases, such as Parkinson's and multiple sclerosis. However, the molecular and cellular underpinnings of BBB dysregulation remain ill-defined, particularly at single-cell resolution across multiple brain regions and many donors.

Navigating vascular complexity

Embarking deep into the complexities of our gray matter, the researchers created a molecular atlas of human brain vasculature across 428 donors, including 220 diagnosed with Alzheimer's and 208 controls. They characterized over 22,514 vascular cells from six different brain regions, measuring the expression of thousands of genes for each cell. The resulting datasets unveiled intriguing changes in gene expression across different brain regions, and stark contrasts between individuals afflicted with AD and those without.

Alzheimer's therapy development faces a significant hurdle brain alterations commence decades before cognitive signs make their debut, at which point it might already be too late to intervene effectively, comments MIT CSAIL principal investigator and electrical engineering and computer science (EECS) Professor Manolis Kellis. Our work charts the terrain of vascular changes, one of the earliest markers of Alzheimer's, across multiple brain regions, providing a map to guide biological and therapeutic investigations earlier in disease progression.

Kellis is the study's co-senior author, along with MIT Professor Li-Huei Tsai, director of the Picower Institute and the Picower Professor in the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences.

The little cells that could

The threads of our human brain vasculature, and every part of our brain and body, are composed of millions of cells, all sharing the same DNA code, but each expressing a different subset of genes, which define its functional roles and distinct cell type. Using the distinct gene expression signatures of different cerebrovascular cells, the researchers distinguished 11 types of vascular cells.

These included endothelial cells that line the interior surface of blood vessels and control which substances pass through the BBB, pericytes that wrap around small vessels and provide structural support and blood flow control, smooth muscle cells that form the middle layer of large vessels and whose contraction and relaxation regulates blood flow and pressure, fibroblasts that surround blood vessels and hold them in place, and they distinguished arteriole, venule, and capillary veins responsible for the different stages of blood oxygen exchange.

The abundance of these vascular cell types differed between brain regions, with neocortical regions showing more capillary endothelial cells and fewer fibroblasts than subcortical regions, highlighting the regional heterogeneity of the BBB.

Clues and suspects

Armed with these annotations, the next phase was studying how each of these cell types change in AD, revealing 2,676 genes whose expression levels change significantly. They found that capillary endothelial cells, responsible for transport, waste removal, and immune surveillance, showed the most changes in AD, including genes involved in clearance of amyloid beta, one of the pathological hallmarks of AD, providing insights on the potential mechanistic implications of vascular dysregulation on AD pathology.

Other dysregulated processes included immune function, glucose homeostasis, and extracellular matrix organization, which were all shared among multiple vascular cell types, and also cell-type-specific changes, including growth factor receptors in pericytes, and transporter and energy in endothelial cells, and cellular response to amyloid beta in smooth muscle cells. Regulation of insulin sensing and glucose homeostasis in particular suggested important connections between lipid transport and Alzheimers regulated by the vasculature and blood-brain-barrier cells, which could hold promise for new therapeutic clues.

Single-cell RNA sequencing provides an extraordinary microscope to peer into the intricate machinery of life, and see millions of RNA molecules bustling with activity within each cell, says Kellis, who is also a member of the Broad Institute. This level of detail was inconceivable just a few years ago, and the resulting insights can be transformative to comprehend and combat complex psychiatric and neurodegenerative disease."

Maestros of dysregulation

Genes do not act on a whim, and they do not act alone. Cellular processes are governed by a complex cast of regulators, or transcription factors, that dictate which groups of genes should be turned on or off in different conditions, and in different cell types. These regulators are responsible for interpreting our genome, the book of life, and turning it into the myriad of distinct cell types in our bodies and in our brains. These regulators might be responsible when something goes wrong, and they could also be critical in fixing things and restoring healthy cellular states.

With thousands of genes showing altered expression levels in Alzheimers disease, the researchers then sought to find the potential masterminds behind these changes. They asked if common regulatory control proteins target numerous altered genes, which may provide candidate therapeutic targets to restore the expression levels of large numbers of target genes. Indeed, they found several such master controllers, involved in regulating endothelial differentiation, inflammatory response, and epigenetic state, providing potential intervention points for drug targets against AD.

Cellular murmurings

Cells do not function in isolation; rather, they rely on communication with each other to coordinate biological processes. This intercellular communication is particularly complex within the cellular diversity of the brain, given the many factors involved in sensing, memory formation, knowledge integration, and consciousness. In particular, vascular cells have intricate interactions with neurons, microglia, and other brain cells, which take on heightened significance during pathological events, such as in Alzheimer's disease, where dysregulation of this cellular communication can contribute to the progression of the disease.

The researchers found that interactions from capillary endothelial cells to neurons, microglia, and astrocytes were highly increased in AD, while interactions in the reverse direction, from neurons and astrocytes to capillary endothelial cells, were decreased in AD. This asymmetry could provide important cues for potential interventions targeting the vasculature and specifically capillary endothelial cells, with ultimate broad positive impacts on the brain.

The dynamics of vascular cell interactions in AD provide an entry point for brain interventions and potential new therapies, says Na Sun, an EECS graduate student and MIT CSAIL affiliate and first author on the study. As the blood-brain barrier prevents many drugs from influencing the brain, perhaps we could instead manipulate the blood-brain barrier itself, and let it spread beneficiary signals to the rest of the brain. Our work provides a blueprint for cerebrovasculature interventions in Alzheimer's disease, by unraveling how cellular communication can mediate the impact of genetic variants in AD."

Going off script: genetic plot twists

Disease onset in our bodies (and in our brains) is shaped by a combination of genetic predispositions and environmental exposures. On the genetic level, most complex traits are shaped by hundreds of minuscule sequence alterations, known as single-nucleotide polymorphisms (or SNPs, pronounced snips), most of which act through subtle changes in gene expression levels.

No matter how subtle their effects might be, these genetic changes can reveal causal contributors to disease, which can greatly increase the chance of therapeutic success for genetically-supported target genes, compared to targets lacking genetic support.

To understand how genetic differences associated with Alzheimers might act in the vasculature, the researchers then sought to connect genes that showed altered expression in Alzheimers with genetic regions associated with increased Alzheimers risk through genetic studies of thousands of individuals. They linked the genetic variants (SNPs) to candidate target genes using three lines of evidence: physical proximity in the three-dimensional folded genome, genetic variants that affect gene expression, and correlated activity between distant regulatory regions and target genes that go on and off together between different conditions.

This resulted in not just one hit, but 125 genetic regions, where Alzheimers-associated genetic variants were linked to genes with disrupted expression patterns in Alzheimers disease, suggesting they might mediate these causal genetic effects, and thus may be good candidates for therapeutic targeting. Some of these predicted hits were direct, where the genetic variant acted directly on a nearby gene. Others were indirect, when the genetic variant instead affected the expression of a regulator, which then affected expression of its target genes. And yet others were predicted to be indirect through cell-cell communication networks.

ApoE4 and cognitive decline

While most genetic effects are subtle, both in Alzheimers and nearly all complex disorders, exceptions do exist. One such exception is FTO in obesity, that increases obesity risk by one standard deviation. Another one is apolipoprotein E (ApoE) in Alzheimers disease, where the E4 versus E3 allele increases risk more than 10-fold for carriers of two risk alleles those who inherited one unlucky copy from each parent.

With such a strong effect size, the researchers then asked if ApoE4 carriers showed specific changes in vascular cells that were not found in ApoE3 carriers. Indeed, they found abundance changes associated with the ApoE4 genotype, with capillary endothelial cells and pericytes showing extensive down-regulation of transport genes. This has important implications for potentially preventive treatments targeting transport in ApoE4 carriers, especially given the cholesterol transporter roles of ApoE, and the increasingly recognized role of lipid metabolism in Alzheimers disease.

"Unearthing these AD-differential genes gives us a glimpse into how they may be implicated in the deterioration or dysfunction of the brain's protective barrier in Alzheimer's patients, shedding light on the molecular and cellular roots of the disease's development," says Kellis. "They also open several avenues for therapeutic development, hinting at a future where these entry points might be harnessed for new Alzheimer's treatments targeting the blood-brain barrier directly. The possibility of slowing or even halting the disease's progression is truly exciting.

Translating these findings into viable therapeutics will be a journey of exploration, demanding rigorous preclinical and clinical trials. To bring these potential therapies to patients, the scientists need to understand how to target the discovered dysregulated genes safely and effectively, and determine whether modifying their activity can ameliorate or reverse AD symptoms, which requires extensive collaborations between medical doctors and engineers across both academia and industry.

This is a tour de force impressive case series, says Elizabeth Head, vice chair for pathology research and pathology professor at the University of California at Irvine, who was not involved in the research. A novel aspect of this study was also the methodological approach, which left the vasculature intact, as compared to previous work where blood vessel enrichment protocol was applied. Manolis Kellis and his colleagues show clear evidence of neurovascular unit dysregulation in AD and it is exciting to see known and novel pathways being identified that will accelerate discoveries at the protein level. Many DEGs associated with AD are linked to lipid/cholesterol metabolism, to AD genetic risk factors (including ApoE) and inflammation. The potential for the ApoE genotype in mediating cerebrovascular function will also lead to possible new mouse models that will capture the human phenotype more closely with respect to the vascular contributions to dementia in humans. The regional differences in DEGs are fascinating and will guide future neuropathology studies in the human brain and drive novel hypotheses.

"The predominant focus in AD research over the past 10 years has been on studying microglia, the resident macrophage-like cells of the brain, adds Ryan Corces, an assistant professor of neurology at the University of California at San Francisco who was also not involved in the work. While microglia certainly play a key role in disease pathogenesis, it has become increasingly clear through studies such as this one that vascular cells may also be critically involved in the disease. From blood-brain barrier leakage to an enhanced need for debris clearance, the vascular cells of the brain play an important part in this complex disease. This study, and others like it, have begun picking apart the underlying molecular changes that occur in vascular cells, showing which genes appear dysregulated and how those changes may interact to alter vascular cell functions. Together with the mounting evidence of vascular involvement in AD, this work provides an important foundation for guiding therapeutic interventions against blood-brain barrier dysfunction in AD, especially during the preclinical or prodromal stages of the disease, where the blood-brain barrier may be playing a central role.

Sun, Kellis, and Tsai wrote the paper alongside Leyla Anne Akay, Mitchell H. Murdock, Yongjin Park, Fabiola Galiana-Melendez, Adele Bubnys, Kyriaki Galani, Hansruedi Mathys, Xueqiao Jiang, and Ayesha P. Ng of MIT and David A. Bennett of the Rush Alzheimers Disease Center in Chicago. This work was supported, in part, by National Institutes of Health grants, the Cure Alzheimers Foundation CIRCUITS consortium, the JPB Foundation, Robert A. and Renee Belfer, and a Takeda Fellowship from the Takeda Pharmaceutical Company.

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Yahoo reported better-than-expected quarterly adjusted profit on Tuesday, positive news for the beleaguered company whose deal to sell its core business to Verizon has been shaken by a massive data breach.

Verizon's general counsel said last week that the hack, which affected at least 500 million email accounts in 2014, could have a material impact, possibly allowing Verizon to withdraw from the $4.83 billion deal.

Revenue from Mavens - the mobile, video, native and social advertising units that Chief Executive Marissa Mayer touts as its emerging businesses - rose 24.2% to $524 million.

Gross search revenue fell 14.1% to $752.5 million.

Yahoo's shares were up marginally in extended trading.

Verizon plans to combine Yahoo's search, email and messenger assets as well as advertising technology tools with its AOL unit, which it bought last year for $4.4 billion.

The deal would transform Yahoo into a holding company, with a 15% stake in Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and a 35.5% interest in Yahoo Japan as well as Yahoo's convertible notes, certain minority investments and its non-core patents.

The deal is expected to close in early 2017, after which Yahoo plans to change its name and become a publicly traded investment company.

Yahoo's revenue rose 6.5% to $1.31 billion in the third quarter ended Sept. 30, beating the average analyst estimate of $1.30 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

After deducting fees paid to partner websites, revenue fell to $857.7 million from $1 billion.

Net income attributable to Yahoo rose to $162.8 million, or 17 cents per share, from $76.3 million, or 8 cents per share, a year earlier.

Excluding items, the company earned 20 cents per share, beating the average estimate of 14 cents.

Yahoo said on Friday it would not hold a call or webcast after the release of the results, citing the Verizon deal.

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