Byron SpiceFriday, October 20, 2006Print this page.
Join the staff of Intel Research Pittsburgh (IRP) and researchers from Carnegie Mellon University, the University of Pittsburgh, and UPMC as the Intel Lab hosts four distinguished lecturers and an open house highlighting results of its successful collaboration with the two universities and the medical center. See the progress of more than a dozen projects including "Diamond," a visualization system that can quickly sort through and compare thousands of images of skin lesions or mammograms to speed and improve cancer diagnosis. See Claytronics, a form of programmable matter made up of modules called catoms that integrate computing, sensing, actuation and locomotion mechanisms. An ensemble of Claytronics catoms can be programmed to organize itself into the shape of an object and visually take on its appearance.
IRP will also feature four distinguished lectures:
Byron Spice | 412-268-9068 | bspice@cs.cmu.edu