Master’s Thesis Presentation • Artificial Intelligence — Coordination in a Peer Production Platform: A Study of Reddit’s /r/Place Experiment
Ben Armstrong, Master’s candidate
David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science
Ben Armstrong, Master’s candidate
David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science
Mina Farid, PhD candidate
David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science
RDF has become a prevalent format to represent disparate data that is ingested from heterogeneous sources. However, data often contains errors due to extraction, transformation, and integration problems, leading to missing or contradicting information that propagate to downstream applications.
Antonina Kolokolova, Department of Computer Science
Memorial University of Newfoundland
A unifying theme in complexity theory in the past few years has been the duality between lower bounds and algorithms. Indeed, some of the main recent lower bounds have been proven by developing better algorithms.
Ingrid Daubechies
James B. Duke Professor of Mathematics and Electrical and Computer Engineering, Duke University
2018 University of Waterloo Doctor of Mathematics, honoris causa
This inaugural Distinguished Lecture in Applied Math will be given in DC 1302, with a reception to follow in DC 1301, the Fishbowl.
Rafi Shan Turas, Master’s candidate
David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science
Aaron Moss, PhD candidate
David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science
Vijay Ganesh, ECE
University of Waterloo
Mustafa Korkmaz, PhD candidate
David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science
Data centers consume significant amounts of energy and consumption is growing each year. Alongside efforts in the hardware domain, there are some mechanisms in the software domain to reduce energy consumption. One of these mechanisms is dynamic voltage and frequency scaling (DVFS) and modern servers which are equipped with multi-core CPUs.
Donald E. Knuth
Professor Emeritus of The Art of Computer Programming
Stanford University
Abstract: The speaker will answer any question on any subject.
Andrew Beltaos / Amenda Chow
University of Waterloo / York University
Teaching via analogies builds upon students' existing knowledge. New concepts that are taught only within the context of mathematics may seem foreign to students at first glance, but if students have already learned analogous concepts elsewhere in life, as educators, we can make use of their existing framework to strengthen their learning.