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Talk: NREC Center – a unique R&D center within Carnegie Mellon University with Jeff Legault

On October 25th, Jeff Legault, Associate Director at the National Robotics Engineering Center (NREC), a semi-autonomous unit within Carnegie Mellon Univeristy’s Robotics Institute will give a talk hosted by Institute for Systems and Robotics (ISR | Lisboa) at Técnico (Civil Pavilion, VA1) .

Abstract

NREC combines innovation with advanced engineering to develop complete robotic solutions ready for deployment and commercialization in a variety of industries such as mining, energy, agriculture, manufacturing, defense, and more. NREC is home to 135 robotic experts and is growing fast. The main purpose of this talk is to share the potential collaboration and career opportunities that NREC can offer through the Carnegie Mellon Portugal Program. The talk will cover a brief history of NREC, many examples of projects they have executed in the past and some that are currently under development, the working environment at NREC and in Pittsburgh in general as well as some of the key elements to consider when exploring a potential career or internship in the United States. There will be a session for questions.

Bio

Mr. Legault is the Associate Director at the National Robotics Engineering Center (NREC), a semi-autonomous unit within Carnegie Mellon Univeristy’s Robotics Institute. Mr. Legault oversees several departments and activities including business development, marketing, recruiting, project financial tracking, and contracts negotiation. Internally, Mr. Legault works with the support and technical staff to improve processes and operations, and position the organization for its continuous growth. Additionally, under Mr. Legault’s leadership, dedicated business development staff creates and manages new client relationships. They pursue new markets and applications that could benefit from robotics and create marketing communications programs to build awareness of the NREC brand. Mr. Legault joined NREC in 2007.

Mr. Legault holds a M.Sc. in Physics from Sherbrook University, Canada.

CMU Portugal Alumnus Jaime Roca gives a Seminar at IST

Jaime Bonnin Roca , a CMU Portugal programme Alumnus in Engineering and Public Policy who graduated in 2017, will give a Seminar at IN+ Center, from Instituto Superior Técnico (IST) entitled “Technology cost drivers for a potential transition to decentralized manufacturing”, on 18th October 2019, at 11 a.m.

Roca is currently an Assistant Professor at the Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands. He was recently interviewed on our website, you can read the full article here: https://cmuportugal.org/media/cmu-portugal-inside-story-jaime-roca/

“Towards a Conscious AI – A computer architecture inspired by cognitive neuroscience” (Porto)

ABSTRACT:

Thanks to major advances in cognitive neuroscience, the world is on the brink of a scientific understanding of how the brain achieves consciousness.  In 1988, cognitive neuroscientist Bernard Baars’ proposed a Global Workspace Model (GWM) of the brain, sketched its computer architecture, and outlined its implications for understanding consciousness. In 1990, the invention of fMRI enabled us to witness brain functioning in real time.  As a consequence, the quest to understand consciousness, once the purview of philosophers and theologians, is now actively pursued also by scientists and mathematicians.

This talk discusses consciousness from the perspective of theoretical computer science. Its major contribution lies in the precise formal definition of a Conscious Turing Machine (CTM), also called Conscious AI. The CTM is defined in the spirit of Alan Turing’s simple yet powerful definition of a computing machine, the Turing Machine (TM), as a way to formalize rigorously, explicitly, mathematically and simply Baars’ GWM.

The reasonableness of definitions of consciousness in the CTM can be judged by how well its concepts agree with the commonly agreed-upon intuitive concepts of human consciousness.

This is joint work of  Manuel, Lenore and Avrim Blum.

Registration is free. 

Lenore Blum (Ph.D., MIT) is Distinguished Career Professor of Computer Science, Emeritus, at Carnegie Mellon, where she was founding director of Project Olympus, faculty director of the Swartz Center for Entrepreneurship, and held the inaugural Deans’ Chair in Technology Entrepreneurship. Project Olympus is a good example of her determination to make a real difference in the academic community and the world beyond. Olympus has two main aims: to bridge the gap between cutting-edge university research/innovation and economy-promoting commercialization for the benefit of our communities and creating a climate, culture and community to enable talent and ideas to grow in the region.  Lenore is internationally recognized for her work in increasing the participation of girls and women in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) fields. She was a founder of the Association for Women in Mathematics and the Expanding Your Horizons Network for middle and high school girls. At Carnegie Mellon she founded the Women@SCS program. In 2004 she received the U.S. Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring. In 2009 she received the Carnegie Science Catalyst Award recognizing her work with Project Olympus targeting high-tech talent to promote economic growth in the Pittsburgh region and for increasing the participation of women in computer science. Currently, women comprise 50% of the undergraduate computer science majors at Carnegie Mellon, more than twice the national average. Her research, founding a theory of computation and complexity over continuous domains, forms a theoretical basis for scientific computation. On the eve of Alan Turing’s 100th birthday in June 2012, she was plenary speaker at the Turing Centenary Celebration at the University of Cambridge, England. Her current research, on developing a computer architecture for a conscious AI inspired both by Alan Turing and recent developments in cognitive neuroscience, is joint with her husband Manuel Blum and son Avrim Blum.

Manuel Blum , the Bruce Nelson University Professor of Computer Science, Emeritus, at Carnegie Mellon University, is a pioneer in the field of theoretical computer science and the winner of the 1995 Turing Award in recognition of his contributions to the foundations of computational complexity theory and its applications to cryptography and program checking, a mathematical approach to writing programs that check their work. He was born in Caracas, Venezuela, where his parents settled after fleeing Europe in the 1930s and came to the United States in the mid-1950s to study at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. While studying electrical engineering, he pursued his desire to understand thinking and brains by working in the neurophysiology laboratory of Dr. Warren S. McCulloch and Walter Pitts, then concentrated on mathematical logic and recursion theory for the insight it gave him on brains and thinking. He did his doctoral work under the supervision of Artificial Intelligence pioneer Marvin Minsky and earned a Ph.D. from MIT in mathematics in 1964. Blum began his teaching career at MIT as an assistant professor of mathematics and, in 1968, joined the faculty of the University of California at Berkeley. He joined the Carnegie Mellon faculty in 2001. Blum has supervised the theses of 35 doctoral students who now pepper almost every major computer science department in the country. The many ground-breaking areas of theoretical computer science chartered by his academic descendants are legend.

 

“Towards a Conscious AI – A computer architecture inspired by cognitive neuroscience” (Lisbon)

ABSTRACT:

Thanks to major advances in cognitive neuroscience, the world is on the brink of a scientific understanding of how the brain achieves consciousness.  In 1988, cognitive neuroscientist Bernard Baars’ proposed a Global Workspace Model (GWM) of the brain, sketched its computer architecture, and outlined its implications for understanding consciousness. In 1990, the invention of fMRI enabled us to witness brain functioning in real time.  As a consequence, the quest to understand consciousness, once the purview of philosophers and theologians, is now actively pursued also by scientists and mathematicians.

This talk discusses consciousness from the perspective of theoretical computer science. Its major contribution lies in the precise formal definition of a Conscious Turing Machine (CTM), also called Conscious AI. The CTM is defined in the spirit of Alan Turing’s simple yet powerful definition of a computing machine, the Turing Machine (TM), as a way to formalize rigorously, explicitly, mathematically and simply Baars’ GWM.

The reasonableness of definitions of consciousness in the CTM can be judged by how well its concepts agree with the commonly agreed-upon intuitive concepts of human consciousness.

This is joint work of  Manuel, Lenore and Avrim Blum.

Registration is free. 

Lenore Blum (Ph.D., MIT) is Distinguished Career Professor of Computer Science, Emeritus, at Carnegie Mellon, where she was founding director of Project Olympus, faculty director of the Swartz Center for Entrepreneurship, and held the inaugural Deans’ Chair in Technology Entrepreneurship. Project Olympus is a good example of her determination to make a real difference in the academic community and the world beyond. Olympus has two main aims: to bridge the gap between cutting-edge university research/innovation and economy-promoting commercialization for the benefit of our communities and creating a climate, culture and community to enable talent and ideas to grow in the region.  Lenore is internationally recognized for her work in increasing the participation of girls and women in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) fields. She was a founder of the Association for Women in Mathematics and the Expanding Your Horizons Network for middle and high school girls. At Carnegie Mellon she founded the Women@SCS program. In 2004 she received the U.S. Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring. In 2009 she received the Carnegie Science Catalyst Award recognizing her work with Project Olympus targeting high-tech talent to promote economic growth in the Pittsburgh region and for increasing the participation of women in computer science. Currently, women comprise 50% of the undergraduate computer science majors at Carnegie Mellon, more than twice the national average. Her research, founding a theory of computation and complexity over continuous domains, forms a theoretical basis for scientific computation. On the eve of Alan Turing’s 100th birthday in June 2012, she was plenary speaker at the Turing Centenary Celebration at the University of Cambridge, England. Her current research, on developing a computer architecture for a conscious AI inspired both by Alan Turing and recent developments in cognitive neuroscience, is joint with her husband Manuel Blum and son Avrim Blum.

Manuel Blum , the Bruce Nelson University Professor of Computer Science, Emeritus, at Carnegie Mellon University, is a pioneer in the field of theoretical computer science and the winner of the 1995 Turing Award in recognition of his contributions to the foundations of computational complexity theory and its applications to cryptography and program checking, a mathematical approach to writing programs that check their work. He was born in Caracas, Venezuela, where his parents settled after fleeing Europe in the 1930s and came to the United States in the mid-1950s to study at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. While studying electrical engineering, he pursued his desire to understand thinking and brains by working in the neurophysiology laboratory of Dr. Warren S. McCulloch and Walter Pitts, then concentrated on mathematical logic and recursion theory for the insight it gave him on brains and thinking. He did his doctoral work under the supervision of Artificial Intelligence pioneer Marvin Minsky and earned a Ph.D. from MIT in mathematics in 1964. Blum began his teaching career at MIT as an assistant professor of mathematics and, in 1968, joined the faculty of the University of California at Berkeley. He joined the Carnegie Mellon faculty in 2001. Blum has supervised the theses of 35 doctoral students who now pepper almost every major computer science department in the country. The many ground-breaking areas of theoretical computer science chartered by his academic descendants are legend.

VR2Market – Closing Seminar

VR2Market was developed within an Entrepreneurial Research Initiative (ERI) project, in the scope of the CMU Portugal Program, in partnership with Institute of Systems and Computer Engineering (INESC TEC), the Institute of Telecommunications (IT), the Institute of Electronic and Telematic Engineering of Aveiro (IEETA), the Portuguese company Biodevices and the Institute of Robotics of Carnegie Mellon University (USA).

The closing seminar will give an overview of the project, led in Portugal by João Paulo Cunha and at CMU by Fernado de la Torre and Bob Iannucci, and the results achieved.

The main goal of the project was to provide secure, reliable and effective systems for first responder professionals in critical emergency scenarios. To achieve this goal an interdisciplinary team, with expertise in areas such as wearable technology for vital signs, biomedical signal processing, sensor networks and RF Location/Intelligent buildings participated in this project resulting in the development of new technology, with new intellectual property and methodologies. Several field trials where performed with Firefighters, Police Officers and Air-traffic Controllers in Portugal and also with militaries in the United States of America. Based on the business and market analysis both in Europe and in the USA (Participation in inRes CMU Portugal Program), this is a needed solution for the user, and due to that an effort is still being made to take this idea to the market with the creation of a spin-off.

The session is open to the general community but registration is required.