More from Events Calendar
- Apr 84:00 PMNew England I-Corps Program Information SessionFor Researchers Interested in Commercializing their New TechnologyLearn what I-Corps is all about and what to expect in the programExplore the benefits of participating in our I-Corps short courseWhat will the next steps be toward a potential $2MM in non-dilutive funding supportThere will be an opportunity for Q&A at the end of the session
- Apr 84:00 PMProfessor. Venkat Kapil, University College LondonTitle: Machine Learning for Full-Quantum Simulations of Condensed Phases and Interfaces: application to the first-principles phase diagram of nanoconfined water
- Apr 84:00 PMSpeakSmart: Communicating Research with Clarity and ImpactPreparing for a research talk, investor pitch, or interview? Eager to polish your three-minute thesis video, podcast, or public talk? In this NEW, six-session workshop series, learn to refine your speaking and presentation skills across a range of contexts. Whether your audience is intimate or enormous, expert or novice, we will help you find strategies to capture and keep their attention. Each interactive session will invite you to implement tips on tailoring your content, delivery, and visual aids to develop your confidence, clarity, and charisma. At the end of six meetings, you will have solid advice and experience with introducing yourself and your topic, tailoring your talk to diverse audiences, structuring your content, streamlining your flow, practicing effectively, and fielding questions.Session 1: Tue, April 1, 4:00-5:30 p.m. First Impressions Session 2: Thu, April 3, 4:00-5:30 p.m. Engage Your Audience Session 3: Tue, April 8, 4:00-5:30 p.m. Structure Your Presentation Session 4: Thu, April 10, 4:00-5:30 p.m. Tell Your Story Session 5: Tue, April 15, 4:00-5:30 p.m. Enhance Your Presentation Session 6: Thu, April 17, 4:00-5:30 p.m. Finish Strong: Conclusions and Q&A
- Apr 84:30 PMBustani Seminar: Lebanon in the shadow of Gaza and in light of a new SyriaHussein IbishSenior Resident Scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute(AGSI)After over two years without a president, in January the Lebanese parliament elected former Lebanese Armed Forces Chief of Staff Joseph Aoun the country's head of state. The deadlock, largely caused by Hezbollah's implausible but insistent efforts to install its ally Suleiman Frangieh, was largely broken by the extreme weakening of the Iranian-backed Shiite party in its disastrously miscalculated confrontation with Israel, sparked by the post-October 7 2023 Gaza war. This sudden degradation of Hezbollah as a paramilitary organization, and concomitant political waning, could open a new opportunity for the revival and strengthening of the Lebanese state. Yet this potential opportunity – with the necessary determination of a wide range of national leaders not yet in evidence – has come at an enormous cost to the country, especially its devastated south. And it will require not merely considerable external diplomatic and financial support, but also a favorable regional strategic and political environment. The most significant factor will almost certainly be developments in Syria following the downfall of the 54-year-long Assad family dictatorship. The emerging order in Syria will, as always, play a heavy role in what may be possible in Lebanon, with scenarios ranging from the development of a stable and tolerant new order that can play a constructive role in Lebanese as well as Syrian reconstruction, to renewed Syrian civil conflict and national fragmentation that can spread into northern Lebanon and beyond. Meanwhile, neighbors like Israel and Iran remain eager to meddle with and take advantage of any opportunities they can find in the Lebanese quest for greater state integration and reconstruction. This talk will examine these dynamics as an integrated, textured web of urgent but unanswered questions, teasing out various possibilities and imponderables that will help shape the near-term future for the long-suffering Lebanese people.
- Apr 84:30 PMNumber Theory SeminarSpeaker: Rebecca Bellovin (University of Connecticut)Title: Characterizing perfectoid covers of abelian varietiesAbstract:Perfectoid spaces have emerged as a key tool in p-adic Hodge theory over the past decade, generalizing earlier ideas due to people like Fontaine and Wintenberger. I will discuss some history and applications of this circle of ideas, before talking about recent work characterizing perfectoid covers of certain abelian varieties. This is joint work with Hanlin Cai and Sean Howe.
- Apr 85:00 PMScience Policy Careers in Government PanelSPI is hosting a virtual panel on 4/8 from 5-6 PM on science policy careers in the government. We have four alumni panelists. Come hear about their career paths and ask any questions you may have!Please find the panelist bios below:Dr. Jack Reid is an engineer on the Science, Technology Assessments, and Analytics team at the US Government Accountability Office, where he works out of the Boston Field Office. There he develops reports for Congress on technology policy issues and serves as an expert advisor to analysts conducting audits of federal government programs in the areas of environmental justice and aerospace technology. A born and raised Texan, he obtained dual bachelor's degrees in Mechanical Engineering and Philosophy at Texas A&M University before heading off to New England for grad school after a short stint as a shock and vibrations engineer at Sandia National Laboratories. He pursued another dual degree at MIT, this time master's in technology policy and aerospace engineering. His work during this period focused on defense acquisition policy and included a couple of internships at the RAND Corporation. Most recently he completed a PhD, also at MIT but in a quite different field: the use of satellite earth observation imagery for sustainable development and urban planning decision-making.Dr. Scott Olesen is a Lead Data Scientist in the CDC Center for Forecasting and Outbreak Analytics. The Center’s mission is deploy better data and better analytics to improve infectious disease outbreak response. He earned his PhD at MIT, where he studied environmental microbiology and the human microbiome, and completed postdoctoral training at the Harvard Chan School of Public Health, where he focused on the epidemiology of antibiotic resistance. He served as Scientific Director for OpenBiome, the fecal microbiota transplantation bank, before the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, when he shifted to epidemiology consulting work for state and federal government, the US Navy, the National Basketball Association, and, finally, Biobot Analytics, a wastewater epidemiology company.Mr. Martin Holmes has served as a professional staff member on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence since February 2023. In that capacity, he focuses on oversight of the National Security Agency, including a wide range of topics including signals intelligence, cybersecurity, research, microelectronics, and artificial intelligence. Prior to joining HPSCI, Martin was the Chief of Space Domain Strategy for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. Before that, he served as a space policy analyst in the Office of the Secretary of Defense.Dr. Rebecca Black specializes in policy development, communications strategies, and evaluation for scientific research programs. She has used cutting-edge computational approaches to evaluate the performance and impact of over twenty large-scale federal scientific research initiatives. Dr. Black has developed and executed comprehensive communication plans for audiences including the general public, scientific researchers, policymakers, and executive leadership. She is an experienced biomedical researcher and has published peer-reviewed publications that studied systems-level therapeutic effects in disease-relevant models. Dr. Black efficiently synthesizes information, implements projects, and builds collaborations across scientific and engineering disciplines.