Page 1 of 21 to 100 of 133 Past Events
2024
November
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Interdisciplinary Seminar by Dr Thomas Hiscock
-Interdisciplinary Seminar by Dr Thomas Hiscock (University of Aberdeen). Topic: How does a finger get its knuckles? Reaction diffusion models in the tetrapod limb and beyond
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BDI Agents in Natural Language Environments
-Developing autonomous agents to deal with real-world problems is challenging, especially when developers are not necessarily specialists in artificial intelligence. This poses two key challenges regarding the interface of the programming with the developer, and the efficiency of the resulting agents. In this talk, we cover a recent work to...
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Interdisciplinary Seminar by Dr Scott Doyle
-Interdisciplinary Seminar by Dr Scott Doyle (University of Aberdeen). Topic: Beyond Sparks: Plasma Science at Aberdeen
October
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Interdisciplinary Seminar by Dr Victoria Volodina
-Interdisciplinary Seminar by Dr Victoria Volodina (University of Exeter): The importance of uncertainty quantification for model credibility
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Interdisciplinary seminar by Dr Daniel Chaves
-Interdisciplinary seminar by Dr Daniel Chaves (Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil). Topic to be confirmed.
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Summer student presentations for projects supported by the Worthington Fund
-Presentations by 3rd year undergraduate University of Aberdeen Physics and Mathematics students on their 3-month summer research projects carried out in the Department of Physics. These projects were supported by the Worthington Fund. Anticipated schedule: 1305-1325: "Inference or Gene Regulatory Networks from RNA-seq data"; 1325-1345: "Dynamics of coupled logistic maps"; 1345-1405: "Androgen Receptor Signalling".
July
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Towards understanding 3D poses and gestures of multiple hands
-Hands are primary interacting tools that provide humans an ability to interact with their outer environments. Therefore, recognizing poses and actions (gestures) of hands from images and videos is essential to comprehensively understand the daily human intentions. Challenges occur when more than one hand appear in an image, due to...
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A journey of the adoption of Blockchain in IoT Environments: Opportunities and Challenges
-Blockchain technology has emerged as a solution for providing transparency and trusted information in a decentralized and resilient manner. Particularly, there are significant potential benefits in integrating blockchain technology with the Internet of Things (IoT). However, adopting blockchain in hardware-constrained environments presents challenges. This integration introduces new issues, especially in...
May
April
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Safety in conversational AI: Meaning is massively influenced by context
-While the NLP community has traditionally explored the ethical issues of text-based models (such as hate speech detection, inherent biases of the system etc), real-world conversations and dialogues differ significantly from structured, written text documents, and this brings with it its own unique set of safety challenges. From an understanding...
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Multi-Agent Equilibria: From Verification to Modification and Beyond
-The classical notion of correctness in formal verification is not appropriate for multi-agent systems–-it does not capture the strategic behaviour of rational agents. As such, a different notion of correctness was proposed through the concept of rational verification. In doing so, we transform multi-agent systems into multi-player games and use...
March
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Exploring TransNational Education (TNE) with Aberdeen Institute as a case study
-For decades, TNE existed in one form or another with USA often leading the field in innovative and accessible education aligned to the home-country educational standards but provided locally. In recent years, this form of education has been recognised by many countries as strategic framework to collaborate in developing necessary...
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"A Day in the Life" of a digital forensics investigator
-Craig Porter from the OpenText company will present a talk about “A Day in the Life” of a digital forensics investigator. Delving into the captivating world of digital investigations, Porter will shed light on the methodologies, challenges, and pivotal role of a digital forensics investigator. Moreover, Craig will showcase their...
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On the Practices for Evaluating Generative AI
-Recent years have seen remarkable advancements in Generative AI, ranging from text-to-text models like ChatGPT, to text-to-image models like DALLE3, and most recently, text-to-video models like Sora. With groundbreaking innovations in unsupervised learning and scalable architectures, these generative models demonstrate wide-ranging capabilities in understanding textual instructions and producing responses in...
2023
December
November
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Critical Infrastructure Protection: Current Challenges and Solutions
-Join us for an informative seminar with Prof. Leandros Maglaras, one of the world's top cybersecurity experts, as he delves into the evolving challenges and solutions surrounding the protection of our critical digital infrastructures.
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Expressive Automated Planning via Satisfiability Modulo Theories
-Planning is a fundamental activity, impacting our daily lives in many and varied ways. The planning task consists of selecting a sequence of actions to achieve a specified goal from specified starting conditions. This type of problem arises frequently in many contexts. Consider, for example, holiday planning. Various interleaved elements...
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Wearable Activity Trackers and Privacy: Assessment of the Risks, Threats, and Countermeasures
-Join us for an enlightening session with Dr. NoƩ Zufferey, postdoctoral fellow at the University of Lausanne as he delves into the privacy threats related to the use of wearable activity trackers.
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Uncovering Implicit Inferences for Improved Relational Argument Mining
-Argument mining seeks to extract arguments and their structure from unstructured texts. Identifying relations between arguments (such as attack, support, and neutral) is a challenging task because two arguments may be related to each other via implicit inferences. This task often requires external commonsense knowledge to discover how one argument...
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CyberForce: A Federated Reinforcement Learning Framework for Malware Mitigation
-Join Chao Feng from the University of Zurich as he unveils the CyberForce framework, a novel approach in malware mitigation for IoT devices using federated reinforcement learning.
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HW/SW Co-design for Security Systems
-Tune in to our online seminar with Huimin Li from Delft University of Technology, Netherlands. Unpack the details of HW/SW co-design and its impact on constructing resilient security architectures. Understand how intertwining hardware and software methodologies can result in enhanced and secure electronic solutions.
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Towards a Robust, Effective, and Resource-Efficient Machine Learning Technique for IoT Security Monitoring
-Join us for a seminar by Dr. Idris Zakariyya, a renowned cybersecurity professional, as he delves into the challenges and solutions for employing Deep Neural Networks in IoT security monitoring.
October
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It's more than just money: The real-world harms from ransomware attacks
-Join Nandita Pattnaik in a comprehensive exploration of the aftermath of ransomware attacks, revealing the intricate spectrum of damages that span beyond monetary losses.
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Beyond Bytes and Bugs: Navigating the Human Side of Cybersecurity
-Join cybersecurity veteran Paul Baird as he delves beyond technicalities to unravel the humanistic aspects of cybersecurity, emphasizing the often-overlooked non-technical attributes crucial for success in the industry.
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A First Look at Digital Rights Management Systems for Secure Mobile Content Delivery
-Join Amir Rafi as he delves into the intricate world of Digital Rights Management (DRM) systems on mobile platforms, offering a comprehensive security assessment of major DRM technologies in the era of cloud-based content delivery.
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High-Profile Data Breach: An In-Depth Analysis of Crypto-Wallet Case.
-Join us for an enlightening session with Assistant Professor Svetlana Abramova as she delves into the repercussions of a data breach on crypto-wallet users. Discover key findings, challenges, and valuable lessons from this real-life incident.
July
May
April
March
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Chemistry seminar - Dr Yi Yu
School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Wuhan University, China Further details to follow.
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Towards Closed-Loop Interactive Autonomous Systems: Understanding People and their Impacts on Decision Making
-At my dissertation defense, I presented Planning and Recognition Together Close the Interaction Loop (PReTCIL) as one of the first ways to integrate algorithms from artificial intelligence (AI) planning and plan, activity, and intent recognition into a single method for adaptive closed-loop interaction in autonomous systems. Despite PReTCIL working out...
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What's next for nematic liquid crystals?
-Professor Helen Gleeson OBE from the University of Leeds' Soft Matter Physics Group
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ChatGPT "passing" things: A(nother) story of cherry-picking, ignoring errors and hope
-In Nov 2022 OpenAI released the new ChatGPT language model, taking the world by storm with it. Today, we are flooded by tweets and articles claiming ChatGPT is reaching human-level performance in many tasks. But what tasks? Is ChatGPT ready to assist (or replace) humans? In this talk, we'll cover...
February
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Natural products as a treasure trove against COVID-19
-Dr Mostafa Rateb, University of the West of Scotland COVID-19 is a recent pandemic that put all nations under a major panic, with many mortalities in 2020 and 2021. Although vaccine development was ongoing, finding treatment that affects the virus would be of great help to combat the viral mutation. Once...
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Achieving collective action through explicit reasoning about expectations
-Abstract: This work studies the collective action problem: identifying and implementing mechanisms that allow members of a community to coordinate their actions in order to achieve a social, rather than individual, benefit. Rather than applying the traditional tools of game theory, we are investigating how maintaining explicit social knowledge encoded in...
2022
October
September
June
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Accelerating Research Software Understandability Through Knowledge Capture
-Research Software is key to understand, reproduce and reuse existing work in many disciplines, ranging from Geosciences to Astronomy or Artificial Intelligence. However, research software is usually difficult to find, reuse, compare and understand due to its disconnected documentation (dispersed in manuals, readme files, web sites, and code comments) and...
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Decolonising science
-The phrase “decolonising the curriculum” very much seems like a buzzword, but what does it really mean? In particular, what does it mean for sciences? I intend to explore the background to “decolonising science”, address some of the issues that this raises, and look at some ideas which not only...
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A Personal Perspective on Impact
-Most of our funders would like to see non-academic "impact" from the projects they support. In this talk, I'll give a personal perspective on impact, looking at both successes such as the Arria NLG spinout company and the simplenlg open-source package, and failures where expected impact did not materialise, such...
May
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Representation Learning for Relational and Cross-Lingual Data
-Utilising real-world relational signals (e.g., structured knowledge) and understanding different languages are two (of the many) fundamental goals of Artificial General Intelligence. The corresponding explorations, however, have been relatively separate. In this talk, I will introduce our recent research outputs on bridging this gap: - We discovered the unnoticed connections between...
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The challenge of adherence to digital healthcare - the case of ASICA
-Patient-directed digital healthcare delivery is becoming increasingly prominent and has received impetus from the recent COVID pandemic. Patient-directed digital healthcare is viewed positively by policy makers as a means to increase healthcare access, reduce costs and increase efficiency. Patient-directed digital healthcare also appears to be popular with certain patient groups....
April
March
February
2021
November
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Machine Learning-based Anomaly Detection and Perturbation Analysis in Nuclear Reactors
-This talk will provide an overview and main results of a recently finished 4-year £5M EU-H2020 project (Sep 2017 – Aug 2021) entitled “Core Monitoring Techniques and Experimental Validation and Demonstration (Cortex - https://cortex-h2020.eu/)” that involved 20 partners from 11 countries (EU, Japan and US). Georgios was leading activities in...
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Formal Argumentation, Dialogue, Users and Explanation
-In this talk I will describe several related strands of research around the use of argumentation and dialogue for human/machine interaction. These include its use in the context of explanation of program behaviour, as an explanatory mechanism for complex opaque systems such as planners and of computational reasoning process such...
October
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Generating and Reasoning with Argumentation Graphs
-In argumentation theory, we study how to model reasoning through the construction and evaluation of arguments using, so called, argumentation semantics. However, this two steps process (generation and evaluation) have been shown to be limiting due to the large number of arguments generated from real-life knowledge bases. Moreover, although it...
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CS Seminar: Evaluating Natural Language Generation
-A key challenge in Natural Language Generation (NLG) is evaluating the quality of texts produced by an NLG system. Robust and reliable evaluation is essential to determining whether a new NLG model or system advances state-of-the-art, understanding weaknesses of current NLG systems, and giving users a good understanding of what...
2020
March
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Why is Physical Organic Chemistry Important in Pharmaceutical Chemical Process Development?
-The utility of applying approaches rooted in physical organic chemistry to the development of manufacturing processes for active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) will be demonstrated through three AstraZeneca case studies. These will illustrate applications to a reaction, work-up and to control a reaction occurring during the formation and crystallisation of a...
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Chemistry Seminar - "Waking-up silent bacterial genes for natural product discovery"
-Mining bacterial genomes has revealed a vast number of gene clusters proposed to direct the biosynthesis of novel specialized natural products. However, many of these gene clusters remain silent, or are poorly expressed, in laboratory growth conditions.
February
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Dr Gordon John Florence from St Andrews University
-Dr Gordon John Florence from St Andrews University
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National Research Council of Canada (NRC) Metrology: who are we and what do we do?
-After a period of business-led research which was accompanied with a dramatic drop in publications and patents, National Research Council of Canada (NRC) turned the page over in 2016 and opened its doors to young scientists and new research ideas. I will briefly talk about NRC Metrology, what do we...
January
2019
November
October
September
August
2018
September
June
May
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Computing Science Seminar. Soto on Using Fuzzy Sets in Data-to-Text systems: A High-Level View of Past and Current Projects
-Venue: Room 311, Meston Building
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Computing Science Seminar. Zukerman on Interacting with Smart Devices: Acceptability and Trust
-Venue: Room 311, Meston Building
March
2016
April
March
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Computing Science Seminar. Moncur on"The role of digital technologies in transitional life events"
-Abstract: Digital technologies are now used across the human lifespan. In this seminar, I'll discuss my HCI research that explores the current roles of digital technologies across transitional human life events (becoming an adult, becoming a parent, breaking up, retiring, end of life ), and the ways in which digital technologies could be designed...
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Computing Science Seminar. de Ruiter on "How Not to Study Interaction"
-Abstract: In this talk I will argue that human interaction cannot be studied properly using the standard experimental methods that have been successful in other areas of the cognitive sciences. Of the many problems with these methods, I will focus on two important ones: (a) the trade-off between experimental control and ecological validity, and (b) profound...
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Computing Science Seminar. Rovatsos on "Diversity-Aware AI - the next frontier?"
-Abstract: Recently, AI has produced impressive advances mostly by following a "standard model" based on data-driven exploration of large solution spaces and optimisation toward a well-defined objective function. Arguably, this process model has little in common with human intelligence, where objectives are often vaguely defined and conflicting, satisficing behaviour is often...
2015
October
2014
August
July
2013
October
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Caminada on "A Brief Overview of Formal Argumentation Theory"
-A presentation about formal argumentation theory.
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Villazon-Terrazas on "Linked Enterprise Data - Iterative and Incremental Life Cycle"
-A presentation about Linked Data.
June
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Computing Science Seminar by Ani Nenkova
-Emotion Analysis for Applications in Neuropsychiatry
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Computing Science Seminar by Ani Nenkova
-Identifying Elements of Text Quality Automatically
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Computing Science Seminar by Ani Nenkova
-Reassessing the state of the art in multi-document news summarization and its evaluation
May
April
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Computing Science seminar by Christopher Brewster
-Linked Data and Semantic Technologies in Disasters and Food: Opportunities and Challenges
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Chemistry seminar - Prof Peter Comba - Coordination chemistry of cyclic peptides: possible biological functions of the patellamides
-Coordination chemistry of cyclic peptides: possible biological functions of the patellamides
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Computing Science seminar by Panos Alexopoulos
-Modelling Vagueness in Ontologies and Semantic Data: a Methodological Perspective
February
2012
December
November
September
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Computing Science seminar by Giorgio Satta
-Introduction to Grammatical Formalisms for Natural Language Parsing
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Topology Seminars
-The Topology Seminar typically takes place on Mondays at 4:15. For details visit http://homepages.abdn.ac.uk/r.hepworth/pages/seminars.html
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Algebra Seminars
-The Algebra Seminar usually takes place at 16:15 on Thursdays. For details visit http://homepages.abdn.ac.uk/r.hepworth/pages/seminars.html
June
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Algebra Seminar by Olivier Brunat
-Image of the braid groups inside the finite Temperley-Lieb algebras.
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What do chemists know about energy?
-School Seminar (NCS)
May
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Algebra Seminar by Aaron Chan
-The Ext-algebra of standard modules of rhombal algebras.
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Computing Science seminar by Margaret Mitchell
-Generating Descriptions of Images
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Algebra Seminar by Meinolf Geck
-On the Frobenius-Schur indicators of unipotent characters
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Computing Science seminar by Sergio Sayago
-Human-Computer Interaction with older people through an ethnographical lens: everyday interactions with Information and Communication Technologies
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Algebra Seminar by John Murray
-Characteristic 2: a survey.
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Algebra Seminar by Shawn Baland
-Generic kernels for modules of constant Jordan type.
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Dynamics of neural networks
-School Seminar (NCS)
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Assembly of chalcogenide clusters into inorganic and hybrid materials
-Chemistry Departmental Seminar
March
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Computing Science seminar by Carron Shankland
-Direct evolution of process algebra model parameters
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Algebra Seminar by Maria Jose Felipe
-The influence of class sizes on normal subgroups
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Algebra Seminar by Yuri Bazlov
-Noncommutative reflections
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Algebra Seminar by John MacQuarrie
-Galois coverings of categories