Presentation Title

Multidisciplinary Research in Brains, Minds, and Machines

Presenter Information

Jesse ParentFollow

Panel Name

Cybersecurity, Privacy, and Artificial Intelligence

Location

Lecture Center Concourse

Start Date

3-5-2019 3:00 PM

End Date

3-5-2019 5:00 PM

Presentation Type

Poster Session

Academic Major

Information Science, Neuroscience

Abstract

The main thrust of this research is about acquiring diverse foundational training in order to better understand the workings of biological and artificial systems. This presentation covers a year's worth of research experiences from one Informatics major seeking to apply their skills in two different labs: computer science and neuroscience. Within applied informatics and computer science, the lab work focused on autonomous systems and drone swarm behavior - looking particularly at basic elements of autonomy and systems communication. In the neuroscience lab, the main project involved monitoring a major biological system feature (circadian rhythm) indirectly via EEG analysis of brain wave activity, including set-up, testing, and operating hardware and software.

Together, these experiences led to gaining insight about systemic functioning in the animal and machine, embodied intelligence, and a greater respect for interdisciplinary research environments.

First Faculty Advisor

George Berg

First Advisor Email

gberg@albany.edu

First Advisor Department

Informatics

Second Faculty Advisor

Annalisa Scimemi

Second Faculty Advisor Email

ascimemi@albany.edu

Second Advisor Department

Biology

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May 3rd, 3:00 PM May 3rd, 5:00 PM

Multidisciplinary Research in Brains, Minds, and Machines

Lecture Center Concourse

The main thrust of this research is about acquiring diverse foundational training in order to better understand the workings of biological and artificial systems. This presentation covers a year's worth of research experiences from one Informatics major seeking to apply their skills in two different labs: computer science and neuroscience. Within applied informatics and computer science, the lab work focused on autonomous systems and drone swarm behavior - looking particularly at basic elements of autonomy and systems communication. In the neuroscience lab, the main project involved monitoring a major biological system feature (circadian rhythm) indirectly via EEG analysis of brain wave activity, including set-up, testing, and operating hardware and software.

Together, these experiences led to gaining insight about systemic functioning in the animal and machine, embodied intelligence, and a greater respect for interdisciplinary research environments.