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Mapping the digital divide: Data reveals internet inequities across the country – UChicago News

UChicago researchers used data gathered on the portal to create a new analysis on disparities that ranked Chicago neighborhoods by internet connectivity. The results emphasize the need for continued, targeted intervention to improve connectivity in particular sections of the city. In the coming months, researchers will continue to deepen the Chicago data, adding critical, fine-grained information on where to take action to improve internet connectivity and, in turn, develop approaches and tools that can be used for similar efforts in cities around the nation.

It is now widely known and accepted that significant disparities exist in internet connectivity across the United States, said Nick Feamster, Neubauer Professor of Computer Science and the College, Faculty Director of Research at the Data Science Institute and principal investigator of the Internet Equity Initiative. Existing datasets affirm the existence of that problem. Yet, we are now at an inflection point where completely new datasetsand new analysis techniquesare needed for us to understand the nature of the problem, to determine how to appropriately target investments, particularly at the city and local level, and ultimately evaluate the effectiveness of those investments.

The portal also features data stories showing how the data collected by the new research initiative can be used to answer a wide range of research and policy questions. Current data stories discuss the level of home internet connectivity needed to support video-conferencing applications for remote home and school, and a comparison of the internet performance in two households from different neighborhoods in Chicago that pay for the same internet service.

Ultimately, our aim is to reframe how all stakeholders think about internet equity, so that discussions and decisions concerning this challenging problem can be grounded in sound data and analysis that directly speak to underlying causes and solutions, Feamster said.

Using the portal, researchers found that, in Chicago, about 80 percent of households are connected to the internet. But when the data is disaggregated to the 77 community areas of the city, it reveals deep, local inequities.

Burnside, West Englewood, Fuller Park, Englewood and West Garfield Park have the lowest percentage of households connected to the internet, each with over one third of homes offline. In contrast, neighborhoods such as the Loop, Lincoln Park and Beverly show over 90 percent connectivity.

These statistics come from an analysis performed by UChicago undergraduate students Lena Diasti and Amy Maldonado and Computational Analysis and Public Policy masters student Drew Keller, working with postdoctoral researcher Tarun Mangla from the Internet Equity Initiative. Together, they combined pre-pandemic information from the U.S. Census, the American Community Survey, the FCC and the Chicago Data Portal to capture a localized snapshot of internet connectivity in Chicago.

The students also found that connectivity strongly correlates with income, unemployment, race/ethnicity and an economic hardship index. The data highlights and motivates the need to look at the data at a community level, underscores the need for continued intervention to improve connectivity in particular sections of the city, and can help quantify the impact of recently launched programs such as Chicago Connected, which provides free, high-speed internet to households with Chicago Public Schools students.

The students analysis gives us a clear quantification of the disparities motivating the work we are doing to change the way we think about the internet as critical infrastructure, said Nicole Marwell, associate professor in the Crown Family School of Social Work, Policy, and Practice and principal investigator of the Internet Equity Initiative. The new data we are collecting goes beyond the traditional metrics to understand a new question about how the performance of the internet varies across Chicago neighborhoods. This new information can help us advise on where new investments can build internet equity.

To add critical detail to the picture in Chicago, the initiative is also working with local community organizations and residents to collect several different measurements of internet performance in households across Chicago. These data are distinct from any other available data on internet performance, thereby filling key gaps in existing datasets.

Volunteers from across Chicago have installed a small device on their router, which allows the researchers to measure the performance of the internet as data travels to and from the household. The study is currently in its pilot phase in 30 community areas and researchers are continuing to recruit volunteers and expand data collection. Researchers will conduct comparisons between neighborhoods, such as Logan Square and South Shore, with different community area-level statistics, while also examining variability across a larger set of neighborhoods across the city.

Together, the initiatives portal and household-level research study on performance reflect a challenge that is national in scope but will require interdisciplinary, local research and intervention to address.

Answering these questions requires developing entirely new approachesfrom the types of data we gather, to the choices we make regarding where and how to gather it, to the techniques we develop to inform decisions, Marwell said. While we are piloting this approach in Chicago, we are producing a set of tools, procedures and analyses that will enable researchers in other cities to replicate what we are doing in Chicago in their own communities.

Adapted from a story published on the DSI website, which includes a ranking of Chicago neighborhoods, by percentage of households connected to the Internet.

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NU to award honorary degrees to Board of Trustees Chair J. Landis Martin, commencement speaker Isabel Wilkerson, among others – Daily Northwestern

Northwestern will award honorary degrees to three alumni and commencement speaker Isabel Wilkerson for their contributions to arts, sciences and leadership at its commencement June 13.

In addition to Wilkerson, NU alumni J. Landis Martin, Judith Olson and Eva Jefferson Paterson will receive honorary degrees.

Wilkerson, who will receive a Doctor of Humane Letters, authored the nonfiction bestsellers The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of Americas Great Migration and Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents.

As a former New York Times reporter, she won the Pulitzer Prize for her work as Chicago bureau chief, becoming the first Black woman to win a Pulitzer Prize for journalism.

(Wilkerson) has become an impassioned voice for demonstrating how history can help us understand ourselves, our country and our current era of upheaval, a University news release said.

Martin (Kellogg 68, Pritzker 73) serves as the chair of the NU Board of Trustees and will also receive a Doctor of Humane Letters. Though he will retire from that role Aug. 31, he will remain a member of the board.

Martin is also chairman and managing director of private equity firm Platte River Equity. He is also a University benefactor and an art connoisseur and donor.

Receiving a Doctor of Science at commencement, Olson (Weinberg 65) is the Donald Bren Professor of Information and Computer Sciences Emerita at the University of California, Irvine. Olson has conducted research on human-computer interaction for more than 30 years.

She holds the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Association for Computing Machinery Special Interest Group on Computer-Human Interaction. She is also a fellow for the ACM and was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 2018.

Paterson (Weinberg 71), who will receive a Doctor of Laws, is the co-founder and president of the Equal Justice Society, a nonprofit organization focused on transforming the nations consciousness on race through law, social science and the arts. She is also co-chair of the California Civil Rights Coalition, which she co-founded and chaired for 18 years.

Peterson served 13 years as executive director of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights, where she was part of a coalition that filed and won an anti-discrimination suit against the San Francisco Fire Department for racial and gender discrimination.

That lawsuit successfully desegregated the department, winning new opportunities for women and firefighters of color, the release said.

Email: [emailprotected]

Twitter: @carolinelbrew

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NU to award honorary degrees to Board of Trustees Chair J. Landis Martin, commencement speaker Isabel Wilkerson, among others - Daily Northwestern

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From the Lab to Real Life – UCF

Sanjeev Gurshaney is caught in a crossroads of enthusiasm at 9 a.m. The UCF junior would like to take time to explain his research on immunotherapy-based medical treatments. But he really would like to start his daily 30-minute commute to the Burnett School of Biomedical Sciences in Lake Nona.

If Im awake, Gurshaney says, then Im thinking about progress.

This visionary mindset is why hes among three UCF students who have been chosen for the 2022 Goldwater Scholarship, widely considered the most prestigious award for undergraduates studying natural sciences, mathematics and engineering. Gurshaney, Camila Acevedo Carrillo and Angela Shar were selected from more than 5,000 nominees representing 433 colleges and universities.

When you know what drives these three, you understand the real importance of the Goldwater honor.

This is a steppingstone, Gurshaney says, and makes me want to work harder to make lives better.

Studying: Biomedical sciences, mathematics (minor)On Track to Graduate: May 2023Goldwater Mentors: Assistant Professor Hung Nguyen (immunotherapy) and Assistant Professor Alicia Hawthorne (neurobiology)Ultimate Goal: To earn an MD Ph.D. and use my lab research in immunotherapy to directly help patients in the clinic.

You might wonder which of Gurshaneys classes requires him to be in the lab 30-plus hours a week. He already has a heavy academic load in science and math.

It isnt a requirement, Gurshaney says. I do it because I want to.

Holiday weeks and summer breaks excite him because then he can spend 40-50 hours a week in the lab. Its been this way since he arrived for his first semester at UCF from Montgomery, Alabama, and became attached to the tiny trials and errors with enormous implications.

I saw an environment where people are trying to improve lives around the world on a micro-scale, Gurshaney says. The Goldwater Scholarship suggests hes on the right track.

Professor Hung Nguyen provided Gurshaneys initial entry into a UCF lab where they studied how the metabolism of cells can be leveraged to improve the responsiveness of blood cancer patients to immunotherapy. Gurshaney says, We were making progress, but then

COVID-19 closed everything, including the lab. Instead of shutting down with it, Gurshaney dug into whatever data he could find on COVID patients.

We found a clear mechanistic link between the metabolism of patients and a dysregulated immune response during severe COVID-19 disease, Gurshaney says.

The findings helped solidify his existing plans: to earn a Ph.D. and an MD so he can use his lab findings to treat patients. In the same way he wants to apply his research to the bedside, he applies his affinity for tennis to teaching special-needs children.

Ive always been inspired by how excited they are to be on the court, he says. It motivates me to improve peoples lives. Thats what makes me want to get back into the lab.

Studying: Computer scienceOn Track to Graduate: May 2023Goldwater Mentor: Associate Professor Pamela Wisniewski (computer science)Ultimate Goal: To make assistive devices more affordable, more durable, and more advanced for people with disabilities.

It took six years for Camila Acevedo Carrillo to find her academic footing. She dabbled in STEM during high school in Puerto Rico, but only as a school subject.

I didnt know it could lead into a career, she says.

So, during her freshman year of college on the island she defaulted to political science.

But it would be relevant only if I went to law school and I didnt have the interest or resources, she says.

After moving to Orlando and enrolling at Valencia College, Acevedo Carrillo started on an engineering track.

It wasnt right for me. I began to question if Id find the right fit, Acevedo Carrillo says.

It turns out, the answer had always been in her life.

When Acevedo Carrillo changed her major to computer science, everything clicked. She thrives in the structure of coding. She likes setting an example for young Latin American women who might question if they have a place in a male-dominant field. And she found encouragement from her mentor in computer science, Associate Professor Pamela Wisniewski.

Shes a phenomenal educator, Acevedo Carrillo says. Ive been inspired with her work-life balance as a mother and wife, and her commitment to making a social impact in a field that often glorifies the opposite.

Acevedo Carrillo has another inspiration. She remembers eating ice cream in a town square around along Puerto Ricos south coast on Sundays. Her mom or dad would struggle to make sure their youngest daughter, Gabriela, could join them. Gabriela was born with numerous conditions, including cerebral palsy.

Most assistive devices are poorly made and expensive. It makes every day a challenge. I know we can use data and clinical trials to develop better equipment.

Acevedo Carrillo didnt have publications or conference presentations for her Goldwater application, but her research has a distinct purpose.

The scholarship assures me that my vision is viable, she says. Id say this to anyone trying to find direction: Whatever you think about every day that could help people, pursue it. You could be on a track to leave a legacy.

Studying: Biomedical sciencesOn Track to Graduate: Fall 2022Goldwater Mentors: Assistant Professor Mehdi Razavi (materials science), Assistant Professor David Flory (physiology), Professor Jessica Wilson (microbiology)Ultimate Goal: To take translational research from the lab to the bedside with patients.

Angela Shar understands the nano-world more clearly than most of us understand the world in front of our faces. But when asked what drives her to excellence, the Goldwater recipient gives a surprising answer.

Failure. Thats the result from 99% of research. The one time you have success is rare. Thats why I love it so much, she says.

Shar has had different research projects underway since she was 11 years old, so shes built quite an affection for failure. During the past three years at UCF, shes been developing a platform to use nanobubbles under the control of ultrasound to help target osteoporosis in specific areas of the body. She once went 8-9 months with no solid results.

When I finally saw nanobubbles targeting a pelvis, it was like an out of body experience, she says. This is what I appreciate about UCF. Students are allowed to try new ideas. When Im in the lab, anything is possible

Shars parents immigrated to the U.S. from Myanmar. They would take Angela and her brother on family trips back to Southeast Asia, in part to show them why theyre so appreciative of America. When she was seven years old, Shar went to an elementary school for children who were deaf and/or blind.

In that moment I saw how resilient those kids were. It always stayed with me, she says.

Resilience guides her in the lab, failures and all. She also tapped into that resilience a year ago when she applied for and didnt receive a Goldwater Scholarship.

Im glad that I grew from it and tried again. The real prize is the community of scholars across the country, Shar says. We all understand the late nights in labs and the importance of failures. Without them, there would be no groundbreaking successes.

Students interested in applying for the Goldwater Scholarship or other major national awards should contact the Office of Prestigious Awards at[emailprotected].

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NUS Computing Joins Forces with TZ APAC to Develop Singapore’s Next Generation of Tech Innovators – PR Newswire

Asia-based blockchain adoption entity TZ APAC will be spearheading the blockchain curriculum at new Centre for Nurturing Computing Excellence

SINGAPORE, May 10, 2022 /PRNewswire/ --Today, TZ APAC, the leading Asia-based blockchain adoption entity supporting the Tezos ecosystem, announced a partnership with the National University of Singapore School of Computing (NUS Computing) to set up the Centre for Nurturing Computing Excellence. Led by Associate Professor Tan Sun Teck from NUS Computing, the new Centre will empower students to learn from real-world industry experts in fields such as blockchain technology, cloud computing, and data science.

Singapore is fast becoming a leader in blockchain technology, and the blockchain ecosystem in Singapore and around the world has seen substantial growth in recent years. To meet the growing demand, it is crucial for top schools such as NUS Computing to build a strong talent pipeline in this fast-growing field and to ensure that computing talents in the country are well-equipped to harness the potential of blockchain technology, in combination with other complementary technologies, to contribute towards Singapore's digital economy.

"Over the past few years, Singapore has established itself as a leading destination for tech enterprises in breakthrough industries. By partnering with pioneering organizations such as TZ APAC, students will have the opportunity to benefit from real-world expertise at a critical juncture of their education," said Associate Professor Tan from NUS Computing. "In establishing this Centre for Nurturing Computing Excellence, we hope to raise the bar for computing education in the country and across the region, as we nurture the next generation of tech talent."

Assoc Prof Tan is also responsible for training and coaching students participating in internationally-renowned programming contests such as the International Olympiad in Informatics (IOI), National Olympiad in Informatics (NOI), and the International Collegiate Programming Contest. In 2021, he led the Singapore IOI team to achieve the best showing in its history, winning 3 gold medals and a silver medal.

The IOI is a competition of significance, with many leading figures across the industry having participated. Notably, early architect of Tezos Arthur Breitman was an IOI contestant who represented France and secured a bronze medal. Other prominent figures in the Tezos ecosystem who have participated in the IOI include the President of France-IOI Mathias Hiron and Nomadic Labs Senior Software Engineer Mehdi Bouaziz. In addition, Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin was a bronze medalist who competed for Canada.

To boost blockchain literacy amongst students involved with the IOI as well as secondary and tertiary students, TZ APAC will create a blockchain developer curriculum where students will be able to learn directly from TZ APAC team members across hybrid virtual and in-person classes, workshops, hackathons and tutorials based on use cases within the Tezos ecosystem. With education as a key priority within the Tezos ecosystem, the establishment of the Centre for Nurturing Computing Excellence comes on the back of past engagements with other higher education institutions across the region including Kyoto University, Nagoya University, and the Indian Institute of Technology Madras.

Colin Miles, newly-appointed CEO of TZ APAC, said: "Over the past year, we've seen a great deal of progress across Asia's blockchain ecosystem in terms of meaningful adoption and TZ APAC has played a significant role in driving this growth across enterprising projects building on Tezos. In partnering with NUS Computing, we hope to advance a future in which blockchain education isn't something limited to niche developer communities, but a vital part of computing curriculums across some of the region's leading universities."

TZ APAC's commitment to Singapore is timely considering that investments in the country's blockchain ecosystem saw a tenfold increase from 2020 to 2021, with 82 deals valued at a combined US$1.48 billion according to KPMG (https://home.kpmg/sg/en/home/media/press-releases/2022/02/kpmg-pulse-of-fintech-h2-21.html). In line with this, the TZ APAC Tezos Developer Hub will also be launchedin the central business district of Singapore.

TZ APAC, along with other community entities, is backed by a ~US$1.2 billion ecosystem war chest stewarded by the Tezos Foundation to support some of the most promising local and regional projects. Serving as the entity's new APAC headquarters at City House, the TZ APAC Tezos Developer Hub is a testament to TZ APAC's long-standing commitment to cultivating blockchain talent in Singapore and across the region.

Newly-appointed TZ APAC CEO Colin Miles and NUS Computing Associate Professor Tan Sun Teck are both available for interviews

About Tezos

Tezos is smart money, redefining what it means to hold and exchange value in a digitally connected world. A self-upgradable and energy efficient blockchain with a proven track record, Tezos seamlessly adopts tomorrow's innovations without network disruptions today. To learn more, visit tezos.com.

About TZ APAC

TZ APAC Pte. Ltd. ("TZ APAC") is the leading Asia-based blockchain adoption entity supporting the Tezos ecosystem. It designs value-added blockchain transformation strategies for enterprises and creators with a bottom-up approach, working closely with blockchain experts and other stakeholders in the Tezos ecosystem. TZ APAC is supported by the Tezos Foundation and is headquartered in Singapore.

About NUS Computing

NUS Computing is one of the leading computing schools in the world, with faculty members who are both internationally recognised researchers and inspiring teachers.

The School offers outstanding undergraduate and graduate degree programmes across the full spectrum of the field of computing, including Computer Science, Information Systems, Computer Engineering, Business Analytics and Information Security, as well as specialisations in emerging areas of importance such as artificial intelligence, fintech, blockchain, analytics and security. Correspondingly, the School attracts excellent students and produce talented graduates who are making their mark in the world.

The School's exceptional education, coupled with the demand for computing talent in all fields and industries, make NUS Computing graduates highly sought-after. The School instil students with leadership qualities and a spirit of entrepreneurship through mentorship, community service initiatives and special programmes, including The Furnace, a start-up incubator which offers funding, infrastructure and management support to bring original ideas to commercial fruition.

In research, NUS Computing has established long-standing excellence in areas such as database, multimedia, computational biology, social media and digital business, as well as digital innovation in service economy. The School is also strategically building research excellence in fields such as cybersecurity, artificial intelligence (robotics and machine learning), smart systems (Internet of Things), analytics, healthcare informatics, as well as computational social science.

To learn more, visit https://www.comp.nus.edu.sg/

SOURCE TZ APAC

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Alexis Williams Is Conquering the World One Step at a Time – Cosmopolitan

Before Alexis Williams turned 20-years-old, she had launched a popular social resource platform, starred in a major fashion campaign, and had her writing published. This multi-hyphenate is not your average New York City college student, but Williams doesn't mind standing out from the crowd. In fact, she owns it.

"Growing up in a predominantly white high school really taught me that my identity is important and my uniqueness matters," says Williams on how she stepped into her confidence. "I learned very fast how important it was to take up space and make sure my voice was heard. I knew that in order to be taken seriously, I had to be ten times louder than everyone else in the room in order to be seen."

In order to be taken seriously, I had to be 10 times louder than everyone else in the room in order to be seen.

At the beginning of the pandemic, the STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and math) student utilized her voice and skills to develop platforms aimed at educating and engaging those interested in social activism. And since the launch of her site, Williams' work has impacted those in her community and beyond. "Growing up as a young Black and Latina woman in computer science, a lot of people tell you that the work you do won't matter," she explains. "It's really fulfilling to know that over a million people have used a website I builtit not only means so much to me, but also reflects all that I've learned and in a skill that historically excludes women who look like me."

According to Williams, individuality is an asset. "I think it's really important to have confidence in those spaces that you walk into, because what makes you different and what makes you unique, gives you an edge in a room," she explains. So, when it comes to her personal style, confidence is something this rising style star believes in wearing from head to toe. Whether it's with bright colors or bold silhouettes, Williams relies on comfortable-chic staples like her SOREL sneakers for an effortlessly cool look that can make a statement throughout her day.

I've been able to really inspire young women who look like me to do exactly what I'm doing, and that is honestly the best part about never giving up.

For Williams, coding and the digital arts are not just a career path but a real passion. "Ever since I learned about the world of computer science, programming, and engineering, I just fell in love with it," she says. "I found so many problems that I wanted to solve within the world of activism and knew that computer science and engineering were just the way that I could solve them." Williams continues to leverage her voice and tech skills for the greater social good, coding and contributing to other organizations and activist groups to ensure that those in her community have access to resources and information.

To say Williams is busy would be an understatement. From running to study sessions and managing her coding commitments, it's safe to say she's got a lot going on. But for this social activist, all that time on her feet is worth it. "I've been able to really inspire young women who look like me to do exactly what I'm doing, and that is honestly the best part about never giving up," she smiles. "It's knowing that I'm inspiring another group of people to break through that struggle and do just the same."

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Rochester students win national awards and fellowships – University of Rochester

May 9, 2022

Each year, students and alumni from the University of Rochester earn merit-based external awards in recognition of their achievements in the classroom and research endeavors, as well as their community contributions through leadership and service activities.

The 202122 academic year saw Rochesters second Rhodes Scholarship recipient in as many years, while two students earned Schwarzman Scholarships to study in China. Theyre joined by fellow students and alumni working to make the world ever better through their teaching, research, and community-building efforts across the globe.

More than 200 University students and recent graduates applied for a wide range of national and international fellowship competitions. Nearly three dozen were selected to receive awards.

Applying for a competitive fellowship is already a significant undertaking, but when you add the ongoing challenges, uncertainties, and anxieties related to the global pandemic, all the applicants deserve to be applauded, says Belinda Redden, director of the Students Fellowships Office.

While there are often many people in different roles behind each fellowship applicant, the achievements belong to the applicants themselves. Our office is honored and proud to support such outstanding, ambitious Rochester students and alumni in competing for prestigious awards that help advance them toward theirMelioraaspirations, adds Redden.

The State Department-sponsoredFulbright US Student Programaims to promote mutual understanding and peace between the United States and other nations through educational and cultural exchange. Students and college graduates apply for grants to study, conduct research, or teach English conversation and US culture abroad while serving as citizen diplomats in the host country.

Coralee Everett 22 (molecular genetics)The Bridgeport, New York, resident will head to Spain for an English Teaching Assistantship. Everett aspires to be a pediatrician, specializing in children with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

Peri Goldberg 22 (biology)Goldberg, who is from Ithaca, New York, will investigate the process of bacterial colonization and the resulting host immune response in the gut at the University of Berns Institute for Infectious Diseases in Bern, Switzerland. Shell also participate in journal clubs and seminars to broaden her microbiology knowledge before pursuing a PhD in microbiology.

Anna Groesch 22, 22E (applied music: cello, musical arts, German)The St. Louis resident will undertake an English Teaching Assistantship in Germany. She plans a career that involves the teaching of both music and language.

Karlin Li 22 (molecular genetics)The resident of Acton, Massachusetts, will head to South Korea for an English Teaching Assistantship. After her Fulbright experience, she plans to earn a doctorate in public health.

Dylan Matvey 20 (cell and developmental biology)The Pittsburgh native will complete research at Charit Institute for Biochemistry and coursework at Humboldt University, both in Berlin, Germany. Matvey will work on a synthetic biology project to establish a novel metabolic pathway in E. coli to produce a bioplastic precursor, glyoxylate, from CO2 and fomate. Matvey plans to pursue a PhD and research career focused on synthetic biology to combat climate change.

Quinnlyn Murphy 20, 21 (T5) (political science)The resident of Manchester City, Vermont, will begin an English Teaching Assistantship in Germany, where she spent a semester abroad in 2018 (Berlin). Following her year in Germany, she hopes to work for a nonprofit devoted to environmental protection or sustainability before embarking on graduate study.

Anne Rosenow 22 (political science)Rosenow will undertake an English Teaching Assistantship in Changhua, Taiwan. The Williamsport, Pennsylvania, resident hopes to teach elementary school students in Taiwan and volunteer in an urban garden while learning about local farming practices and national food policies. Afterward, she plans to pursue graduate study and a career in public policy focused on sustainability.

Lauren Sigda 22 (brain and cognitive sciences, art history)Sigda, who is from Larchmont, New York, will head to the University of Vienna in Austria to conduct research into the neurological underpinnings of visual aesthetic preference and complete coursework in cognitive psychology and German. Her Fulbright experience will be a precursor to doctoral study in visual cognitive science.

Caroline Stockwell 22 (biomedical engineering)The Westfield, New Jersey, resident will join the Andalusian Center for Microbiology and Regenerative Medicine in Seville, Spain. Shell investigate ways to improve radiation therapy for patients with brain tumorsthrough study of the mechanism of action of a Mesenchymal Stem Cellbased therapy. Afterward, Stockwell will commence her PhD in the division of pharmacoengineering and molecular pharmaceutics at UNCChapel Hill.

TheBenjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship Programenables American undergraduates of limited financial means to participate in international study and internship opportunities, thereby diversifying the pool of students representing the U.S. abroad while advancing their academic and career goals.

Lisadine Cherubin 23Area of study: Health, behavior, and society (BA)Country: United Kingdom

Justin Pimentel 23Area of study: Computer science (BS)Country: Spain

Andre Tulloch 23Area of study: Health, behavior, and society (BA)Country: United Kingdom

Named after the former senator and presidential candidate, theBarry Goldwater Scholarshipis a highly competitive national award for American undergraduate students in science, math and engineering who are committed to pursuing advanced degrees and research-oriented careers in STEM fields.

Ellen Irving 23 (biochemistry and chemistry)The Penfield, New York, native aspires to earn a doctorate in biochemistry and chemical biology and to conduct research at the chemistry-biology interface, with a focus on protein engineering applications in human health, sustainability, or chemical catalysis.

TheDAAD RISEprogram offers undergraduates from North America, Great Britain, and Ireland summer research internships at top German universities and research institutions. RISE Professional offers research internships in Germany to masters and PhD students.

Nathaniel Webber 23 (computer science and philosophy)The Hingham, Massachusetts resident will be placed at the University of Lbecks Institute of Computer Engineering. His project is human-centered swarm behavior.

Maria Aguilera 20 (MS) (chemistry)Aguilera, now a doctoral student in chemistry at Rochester, is from Palmira, Valle del Cauca Department, Colombia. She will be in the RISE Professional Program at BASF SE, a German multinational chemical company with headquarters in Ludwigshafen. Her project involves the screening of adjuvants for delivery optimization of active ingredients.

The National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program supports outstanding students who are pursuing research-based masters and doctoral degrees in STEM, STEM education, and social science fields at accredited US institutions.

Katharine Chang (graduate student)Area of study: Psychology (BA)

Jarod Forer 22Area of study: Mechanical engineering (BS)

Molly Griston 22Area of study: Physics (BS)

Amanda Forti (graduate student)Area of study: Chemical engineering (BS)

Renee Niles (graduate student)Area of study: Chemical synthesis (BS)

Claire Wilson (graduate student)Area of study: Environmental engineering (BS)

Caroline Cardinale (graduate student)Area of study: Mechanical engineering (BS)

Michaela Alarie (graduate student)Area of study: Biomedical engineering (BS)

Alexandre Trapp 20Area of study: Computational biology (BS)

Shon Koren (graduate student)Area of study: Neuroscience (BS)

Emily Dudek 19Area of study: Cognitive psychology (BS)

Projects for Peace is a global program that partners with colleges, universities, and other educational institutions to provide grants to young people who design and implement summer projects focused on promoting peace and conflict resolution.

Souleymane Diallo 24 (politics, philosophy, and economics) and Abdoul Rasmane Maiga 25 (computer science)Diallo is from Guinea and Maiga is from Burkina Faso, both in West Africa. Their project aims to promote long-term peace and reconciliation in Guinea, which has experienced numerous political instabilities, violence, and social injustices.

The nonprofit Public Policy and International Affairs Program was created in 1980 to prepare the next generation of diverse policy and foreign affairs leaders. Undergraduates participate in the Junior Summer Institute, a rigorous, seven-week, graduate-level preparation program hosted by six American universities.

Wesley Mawn 23 (environmental studies)A resident of Northbridge, Massachusetts, Mawn will take part in the PPIA summer program at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. He plans to attend graduate school and build a career in public service.

The Charles B. Rangel International Affairs Program is a State Department fellowship program that supports outstanding American students from diverse backgrounds in pursuing masters degrees to prepare for diplomatic careers in the US Foreign Service.

Marco Ramos 19 (international relations)The dual US-Mexico citizen has worked as a paralegal for a Washington, DC, law firm since 2020 and will attend Georgetown University on scholarship this fall as part of the Master of Science and Foreign Service program.

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Researchers From University Of California Irvine Publish Research In Machine Learning (Machine Learning In Ratemaking, An Application In Commercial…

2022 MAY 09 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Insurance Daily News -- Research findings on artificial intelligence are discussed in a new report. According to news reporting out of the University of California Irvine by NewsRx editors, research stated, This paper explores the tuning and results of two-part models on rich datasets provided through the Casualty Actuarial Society (CAS).

Financial supporters for this research include Casualty Actuarial Society Award: NA.

Our news correspondents obtained a quote from the research from University of California Irvine: These datasets include bodily injury (BI), property damage (PD) and collision (COLL) coverage, each documenting policy characteristics and claims across a four-year period. The datasets are explored, including summaries of all variables, then the methods for modeling are set forth. Models are tuned and the tuning results are displayed, after which we train the final models and seek to explain select predictions. Data were provided by a private insurance carrier to the CAS after anonymizing the dataset. These data are available to actuarial researchers for well-defined research projects that have universal benefit to the insurance industry and the public.

According to the news reporters, the research concluded: Our hope is that the methods demonstrated here can be a good foundation for future ratemaking models to be developed and tested more efficiently.

For more information on this research see: Machine Learning in Ratemaking, an Application in Commercial Auto Insurance. Risks, 2022,10(80):80. (Risks - http://www.mdpi.com/journal/risks). The publisher for Risks is MDPI AG.

A free version of this journal article is available at https://doi.org/10.3390/risks10040080.

Our news editors report that more information may be obtained by contacting Spencer Matthews, Department of Statistics, Donald Bren School of Information and Computer Science, University of California Irvine, Irvine, CA 92697, USA. Additional authors for this research include Brian Hartman.

(Our reports deliver fact-based news of research and discoveries from around the world.)

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Presentation – David Bolder – Statistics and machine-learning: variations on a theme – Central Banking

Presentation - David Bolder - Statistics and machine-learning: variations on a theme - Central Banking

Presentation - David Bolder - Statistics and machine-learning: variations on a theme

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Presentation - David Bolder - Statistics and machine-learning: variations on a theme - Central Banking

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Beacon Biosignals announces partnership with Stratus to advance at-home brain monitoring and machine learning-enabled neurodiagnostics – PR Newswire

Collaboration will enable AI-powered decentralized clinical trials

BOSTON, May 10, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Beacon Biosignals, which applies AI to EEG to unlock precision medicine for brain conditions,today announced a partnership with Stratus, the nation's leading provider of EEG services, to enable expanded clinical trial service capabilities by leveraging Beacon's machine learning neuroanalytics platform.

EEG is standard of care in the clinical diagnosis and management of many neurologic diseases and sleep disorders, yet features of clinical significance often are difficult to extract from EEG data. Broader adoption of EEG technology has been further limited by labor-intensive workflows and variability in clinician expert interpretation. By linking their platforms, Beacon and Stratus will unlock AI-powered at-home clinical trials, addressing these challenges head-on.

"The benefits of widely incorporating EEG data into pharmaceutical trials has been desired for years, but the challenge of uniformly capturing and interpreting the data has been an issue," said Charlie Alvarez, chief executive officer for Stratus. "Stratus helps solve data capture issues by providing accessible, nationwide testing services that reduce the variability in data collection and help ensure high-quality data across all sites. Stratus is proud to partner with Beacon and its ability to complete the equation by providing algorithms to ensure the quality of EEG interpretations."

Stratus offers a wide variety of EEG services, including monitored long-term video studies and routine EEGs conducted in the hospital, clinic, and in patients' homes. Stratus has a strong track record of high-quality data acquisition, enabled by an industry-leading pool of registered EEG technologists and a national footprint for EEG deployment logistics. The announced agreement establishes Stratus as a preferred data acquisition partner for Beacon's clinical trial and neurobiomarker discovery efforts using Beacon's analytics platform.

"Reliable and replicable quantitative endpoints help drive faster, better-powered trials," said Jacob Donoghue, MD, PhD, co-founder of Beacon Biosignals. "A barrier to their development, along with performing the necessary analysis, can often be the acquisition of quality EEG at scale. Partnering with Stratus and benefiting from its infrastructure and platform eliminates that hurdle and paves the way toward addressing the unmet need for endpoints, safety tools and computational diagnostics."

Beacon's platform provides an architectural foundation for discovery of robust quantitative neurobiomarkers that subsequently can be deployed for patient stratification or automated safety or efficacy monitoring in clinical trials. The powerful and validated algorithms developed by Beacon's machine learning teams can replicate the consensus interpretation of multiple trained epileptologists while exceeding human capabilities over many hours or days of recording. These algorithms can be focused on therapeutic areas such as neurodegenerative disorders, epilepsy, sleep disorders and mental illness.For example, Beacon is currently assessing novel EEG signatures in Alzheimer's disease patients to identify which patients may or may not benefit from a specific type of therapy.

"This collaboration will enable at-home studies for diseases like Alzheimer's," Donoghue said. "It has traditionally been difficult to obtain clinical-grade EEG for these patients at the scale required for phase 3 and phase 4 clinical trials. Stratus' extensive expertise in scaling EEG operations in at-home settings unlocks real opportunities to harness brain data to evaluate treatment efficacy."

About Beacon BiosignalsBeacon's machine learning platform for EEG enables and accelerates new treatments that transform the lives of patients with neurological, psychiatric or sleep disorders. Through novel machine learning algorithms, large clinical datasets, and advances in software engineering, Beacon Biosignals empowers biopharma companies with unparalleled tools for efficacy monitoring, patient stratification, and clinical trial endpoints from brain data. For more information, visit https://beacon.bio/. For careers, visit https://beacon.bio/careers; for partnership inquiries, visit https://beacon.bio/contact. Follow us on Twitter (@Biosignals) or LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/beacon-biosignals).

About StratusStratus is the nation's leading provider of EEG solutions, including ambulatory in-home video EEG. The company has served more than 80,000 patients across the U.S. Stratus offers technology, services, and proprietary software solutions to help neurologists accurately and quickly diagnose their patients with epilepsy and other seizure-like disorders. Stratus also provides mobile cardiac telemetry to support the diagnostic testing needs of the neurology community. To learn more, visit http://www.stratusneuro.com.

MEDIA CONTACTMegan MoriartyAmendola Communications for Beacon Biosignals913.515.7530[emailprotected]

SOURCE Beacon Biosignals

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Beacon Biosignals announces partnership with Stratus to advance at-home brain monitoring and machine learning-enabled neurodiagnostics - PR Newswire

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Could Machine Learning Reduce Healthcare Costs and Improve Care? – Design News

Todays patients want more control of their own healthcare and health data, but the current healthcare system may be limiting. Unfortunately, current systems available in the market do not actively take into account patient needsthey are designed to serve physicians and hospitals but are not focused on meeting end-user needs, claims Ajay Panwar, CEO and founder of Pulse, a digital health startup. When we did our customer analysis, it was one of the popular asks that they need to have better control of their health and also define their risk level for various conditions. The current market doesn't have anything similar to this need.

Panwar hopes to address such patient needs by building simple, interactive systems that utilize machine learning (ML) and predict patient behaviors. In the first phase of Pulses development, machine learning models would help predict the patient behaviors based on their care plan and patient compliance, and then predict what is needed to ensure the successful outcomes of their healthcare needs, he told Design News. Later phases would include how to ensure patients are following through with the pattern for the best possible outcomes. It would also include genetic, family-related health conditions and how those could have an impact on quality of life. We are using unsupervisedmachine learning models in order to predict these outcomes.

The ML algorithms are specifically designed for each task, he explained further. The ML models will have the capabilities to take into consideration existing assessments and calculate the user needs, he said. The backend system development is in multiple languages.

The stand-alone software could also enable patients to schedule surgeries, manage chronic conditions and appointments, arrange rehabilitation, and reach dedicated care teams if needed, he explained. These are just basic examples;however, the end goal is to improve patient outcomes by connecting various pieces of independenthealthcare systems.

The interactive systems would give users the ability to control theirhealthcare. If they need [to be] hands-off, then the Pulse healthcare team would help them navigate through these challenges, he said.

In a later phase of development, Pulse plans to build APIs to link to medical devices so the patient interface would be able to interact with the devices. This is a bigger challenge to achieve; currently nothing like this exists, Panwar said.

With multiple phases of platform development planned, Pulse will initially target high-risk populations that have the imminent need for care coordination due to theirhealth conditions and limitations, he said. We would also build a risk meter that is entirely based on the prediction model with a very limitedbeta error.

Panwar shared that Pulse reached the semi-finalist round during the prestigious University of California--Irvine New Venture Competition (NVC) last year. The annual competition offers participants the opportunity to launch a startup and fund a business idea in just several months, he said.

As development continues, Pulse continues to engage with angel investors, venture capitalists, and healthcare partners looking to reinvent healthcare and overcome the obstacles causing coordination difficulties and low-value care, the company shared in a news release.

Panwar isa senior engineering manager atMedtronic and has authored articles for Design News's sister publication MD+DI and other publications.

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Could Machine Learning Reduce Healthcare Costs and Improve Care? - Design News

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