Skip to main content

Seeking students to participate in research study, $10 Amazon gift card

The Personal Robotics Laboratory at the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science and Engineering is seeking able-bodied individuals to participate in a research study on the characterization of forces and motions during human manipulation of food.

 

During the experiment, you will be seated on a chair and be basically asked to pick up various items of food using an instrumented fork from a plate / bowl on a table. The study should approximately take between 1 and 2 hours.

 

Qualifications:

  • Between 18  and 70 years of age

  • Able-bodied individual

  • Fluent in written and spoken English

 

Requirements:

  • US Citizens or Permanent Residents

  • Study duration is 1-2 hours

 

Compensation:

  • Participants will be compensated $10/hour for participation in this study, in the form of Amazon gift cards

 

Contact:

  • Contact Tapomayukh Bhattacharjee at tapo@cs.washington.edu for further details or to schedule your participation.

  • Principal Investigator: Prof. Siddhartha Srinivasa, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Washington

 

Thanks,

-Tapo

November 22, 2017

Alternative spring break – application deadline is THIS FRIDAY Nov 24th.

Are you interested in a different kind of spring break experience?

• Would you like to do something meaningful on your spring break this year?
• Would you like to play an important role in K-12 outreach for HCDE and the UW?
• Are you interested in traveling to rural Washington to mentor middle and high school students?
 
This spring, HCDE is again organizing a team of undergraduate students to participate in the UW Pipeline Project’s Alternative Spring Break (ASB) program. This is an exciting outreach opportunity, running workshops for high school and middle school students.
This year, we will be returning to Neah Bay, WA, and the focus will be on digital storytelling and programming, using Scratch and ProcessingStudents will spend their spring break leading these workshops and engaging with the wonderful Makah Tribe community.
This video explains what it’s all about: https://www.hcde.washington.edu/videos/asb.
If these prospects appeal to you, consider applying for the HCDE Alternative Spring Break Project, which begins with a seminar during winter quarter to prepare for the ASB trip, helping develop the curriculum and piloting the workshop.
Details and application information are here: https://www.hcde.washington.edu/research/davidson#asb. The deadline to apply is Friday, November 24.
 
November 22, 2017

Research opportunity for developing machine learning software – credit offered through UW Dept of Biomedical Informatics and Medical Education

Subject: Research opportunity for developing machine learning software

 

Hi,

 

Prof. Gang Luo from UW’s Department of Biomedical Informatics and Medical Education is a computer scientist and is teaching in the CSE department this quarter. He has research opportunities for CSE students to help develop pure machine learning software. The students need to fulfill the following conditions simultaneously:

–        Required: Know machine learning to the level of the material in the textbook “Introduction to Machine Learning (Adaptive Computation and Machine Learning series)” third edition written by Ethem Alpaydin, either by taking machine learning courses or doing machine learning projects.

–        Required: Is familiar with the Java source code of the open source Weka package for machine learning and data mining.

–        Required: Is very good at Java programming.

–        Required: Has around 20 hours per week to do voluntary research work (no payment will be provided).

–        Required: The student will stay at UW for a few years (i.e., the student should not be in his/her last year at UW), as doing the project to produce useful results will take 20 hours of work per week for a few quarters (as typical with research projects involving software system development). The pace of progress can be accelerated if the student has more hours per week to devote to the project, but not to the degree that can be achieved for a last year student at UW.

–        Optional: Know system techniques typically taught in operating system or database courses.

 

Prof. Gang Luo can provide independent study course credits from UW’s Department of Biomedical Informatics and Medical Education at either the undergraduate or graduate level, depending on the student’s status. The student can choose the number of credits at the student’s wish, after discussion with Prof. Gang Luo. The research work would involve studying one or more machine learning/data mining algorithms in Weka in great detail (the student may need to read a few papers, as not all of the algorithm implementation details are described in machine learning textbooks), using system techniques to design some changes to the algorithm’s source code in Weka to fulfill a certain purpose, changing the Java source code in Weka here and there, and doing software performance testing. The students will have quite some flexibility in choosing which algorithms to work on, and will gain experience with machine learning/data mining research and advanced software development that can be an excellent addition to the student’s resume. Prof. Gang Luo can teach the students the essential system techniques, if needed. This solicitation has no expiration date. Interested students can contact Prof. Gang Luo at luogang@uw.edu at any time they like when they are ready. For example, a student who hasn’t studied Weka source code before may need some time to study the source code first before making the contact. Interested students should provide Prof. Gang Luo their transcripts (at least the portion of the computer science courses and math/statistics courses with the grades, if not the full transcript), their resume listing their experience, and their student status (e.g., which year at UW and for how long the student will continue to stay at UW), to help Prof. Gang Luo understand how to interact with the students. Doing research is harder and takes more time and effort than taking courses. Prof. Gang Luo is only interested in working with students who work hard, perform well in CSE courses, and are willing to devote serious effort and enough time to the research project.

 

Thanks for your attention.

November 22, 2017

ACM Research Night

Hey CSE,

We’re excited to announce that Research Night will happen next Thursday, November 30th, starting at 4:30pm in EEB 125. The goal of this event is to connect undergrad students with the CSE labs to see what’s happening currently, and optionally to give undergrads an opportunity to ask about research opportunities within these labs.

The event will have two parts.

  1. Lightning talks (EEB 125 at 4:30pm): We will have an introduction by Zach Tatlock, and then representatives from each lab will give a brief overview of their lab and projects.
  2. Open labs (CSE at ~5:30pm): After lightning talks, participating labs will be open to undergrads. You can talk more in depth with labs that sounded interesting and also eat cookies that will be in each lab.

We’re excited for this event, and hope you can join us!

Sincerely,

ACM

November 21, 2017

Animation Research Seminar! CSE 464 – B, 3 credits, Winter

CSE majors! If you’re interested in graphics or animation, want to learn more about how to do research, or just need 3 more interesting credits for winter, sign up for Animation Research Seminar (CSE 464 – Section B).

This seminar meets one hour per week to discuss research papers on topics in Animation, Graphics, and Machine Learning.  Along with learning more about these specific topics, you’ll learn the basic foundations of research in science and technology — reading and evaluating papers, and designing and implementing related research projects. You will have amazing researchers working with you for implementing the projects.
More details on the course webpage.
Time : Fridays at 1 – 1:50pm
Location : EEB054 
Credits : 3 
Computer Vision (CSE455), Graphics (CSE457), Machine Learning (CSE446), or Animation Capstone (CSE 458/460) are recommended but not required.
Email deepalia@cs.washington.edu if you have any questions.
November 21, 2017

BSMS (5th year masters) small mid-year application now open, closes Dec. 8th

The small, mid-year application for the BSMS program is now open: https://norfolk.cs.washington.edu/csem_app

Important Dates:

Nov 21: Application Opens

Dec 8th: Application Closes

Dec 9th – 18th: Recommendations from Faculty requested

Dec 19th: Applications begin review

Decisions sent by December 29th

The intended applicants for this round are students who are graduating this fall or winter quarter who were caught off guard by changes to the program that were announced late last year – namely, that you must apply for the program before you have graduated from the undergraduate program. This will be a very small, targeted application cycle. We will likely admit only 1-5 students.

If you are graduating in spring 2018 or later, you may apply during this application cycle, but this is not the intention of this round. Most students graduating this June should have applied to the BSMS program last May, as the ideal time to apply is approximately one year before you finish your undergraduate degree.  For students who are graduating this spring quarter or later who wish to apply, you can reach out to Jenifer and me through the vgrad-advisor@cs.uw.edu email with questions.

The details on the BSMS webpages still reference the spring admission cycle because this is a special, one time opening.

 

Thank you,

Jenifer and Crystal

BSMS Advising Team

November 21, 2017

ACM-W Impostor Syndrome Event

Hello everyone!

ACM-W hopes the quarter is treating you well.

Come learn about impostor syndrome and hear from a variety of individuals who have experienced it and their thoughts on how to cope with it. All questions and experiences are open for discussion as well.
November 28, 2017
6-7:30pm
Gates Commons (CSE building, 6th floor)
Space is limited so please RSVP at tinyurl.com/impostorsyndromeRSVP to reserve your spot (you must be logged into your CSE account to access the survey).
November 20, 2017

Winter 2018 Overload Request Form – sign up if you are trying to enroll in a full CSE course

Here is the much anticipated Overload Request Form for Winter 2018.

If you are struggling to get into a CSE Major’s course, you should fill this form out before 8am on Monday.  We will do everything possible to get you all into the courses you need.

Please note, if you have 3 CSE courses on your schedule and are asking for a 4th or 5th, you need to explain why.  We are trying to balance all requests with the fact that some students have zero courses and we need to get as many people through as possible.

We hope to have decisions mailed out by Wednesday the 22nd.

Thank you for your patience as we work on growing our courses.

Sincerely,

CSE Advising

November 16, 2017

Undergraduate student fall 2017 survey

Dear CSE Ugrad Students,

Dear Student,

The Computing Research Association (CRA) is interested in career development among students in computing fields. They would like to hear about your experiences as a student, as well as your plans for the future. To that end, I encourage you to complete their brief survey, which will take no more than 20 minutes to complete.

Should you decide to complete the survey, you will be entered into a raffle for a $100 gift card to Amazon!

***If you have already been contacted by the CRA to complete this survey, please disregard this message.***

If you are interested in completing the survey, please click the link below, or copy and
paste the URL into your internet browser:
https://cerp.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_3UH7q6TmdZ8YRPD

The survey is being conducted by the CRA’s Center for Evaluating the Research Pipeline (CERP). For more information on CERP, please visit their website: http://cra.org/cerp/.

Many thanks in advance!

Thank you!

~CSE Advising

November 15, 2017

Lunch with the chair TOMORROW, Thursday the 16th 12-1pm Gates Commons

Hey everyone,

The first lunch with the chair will be tomorrow, Thursday, from noon to 1pm in the Gates Commons (room 691 of the Allen Center).  Come join the Director of the Allen School to hear about what’s new in CSE and to voice any appreciation or concerns you may have with life in the Allen Center.

Pizza is on the menu. This event is for current majors only.

 

CSE Advising

November 15, 2017

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »