Date
Speaker: Dr. Samuel Crew (Imperial College London, UK)
Title: The quantum path signature
Date and time: 16th July Tuesday at 10:00
Location: L4F01
Language: English
Date
Talk by Nicky Kai Hong Li, Technical University of Vienna (Austria)
Seminar Summary: Certifying entanglement is an important step in the development of many quantum technologies, especially for higher-dimensional systems, where entanglement promises increased capabilities for quantum communication and computation. A key feature distinguishing entanglement from classical correlations is the occurrence of correlations for complementary measurement bases.
Date
Speaker: Dr. Emanuele Gallorini, Post Doctoral Researcher, Department of Aerospace Science and Technology, Politecnico di Milano
Date
[Speaker] Dr. Katia Del Rio-Tsonis, Professor, Dept. Biology, Miami University (MU)
[Title] Understanding the regenerative powers of ocular pigment epithelium
Date
QG group meeting.
Speaker: Mirian Tsulaia.
Title: "Non-Supersymmetric Heterotic Strings".
Date
Speaker: Dr. Rui Wang (Third Institute of Oceanography, Ministry of Natural Resources, China)
Title: Antarctic krill resources under climate change
Date
Speaker 1: Mr. Jose Restom (Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence: MBZUAI, UAE)
Title: Handling Data Heterogeneity via Architectural Design for Federated Visual Recognition
Speaker 2: Dr. Mohammad Sabokrou, Staff Scientist, OIST
Title: Universal Novelty Detection Through Adaptive Contrastive Learning
Date
Speaker 1: Ms. Weiqiu You (University of Pennsylvania)
Title: Sum-of-Parts: Faithful Attributions for Groups of Features
Speaker 2: Mr. Xiaoyuan Zhang (City University of Hong Kong)
Title : Multiobjective meets machine learning, from a single solution, a finite set of solutions to infinite solutions.
Date
Speaker 1: Mr. Rahul Steiger (ETH Zurich)
Title: In-Context Predictions on ICU Time-Series
Speaker 2: Mr. Thibault De Surrel (Université Paris-Dauphine)
Title: How Riemannian geometry can help us build better Brain Computer Interfaces
Date
Speaker: Dr. Haruna Fujioka, Assistant Professor of Okayama University
岡山大学 藤岡春菜 助教授 (個人HP)
社会性昆虫、 昆虫生態学、動物行動学、時間生物学
Vespa hornet larvae produce a rhythmic 'rasping' sound by rubbing their mandibles against the cell wall of the nest. The call is thought to be a larval provisioning cue. However, detailed observation of larval calls has been limited to a few species, and it is not known whether the call can be influenced by the external environment or internal larval states such as hunger. We conducted laboratory observations of larval calls to investigate the effect of 1) larval stage, 2) daily variation, and 3) larval hunger level. Vespa mandarinia larvae produced sounds independent of light conditions, time of day, worker absence, and hunger level. A key finding of this research is the novel discovery that larvae produce sounds at night, a previously undocumented behavior.