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Colorado State University's College of Liberal Arts celebrates its graduates at the Spring Commencement. May 13, 2022

Colorado State University's College of Liberal Arts celebrates its graduates at the Spring Commencement. May 13, 2022

Michigan Engineering Graduate Students and Postdoctoral Research Fellows begin a networking exercise while attending Orientation at the Stamps Auditorium on the North campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, on Tuesday, August 23, 2022.

 

Speakers emphasized the importance of students getting to know their fellow students and building community and support systems.

 

Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing

White Coat Ceremony

Langford Auditorium

Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

Vanderbilt University

Nashville, TN

 

Photo: Anne Rayner

Necmiye Ozay, an assistant professor of electrical engineering and computer science talks to Lars Petter Nilsson, EECES Graduate Student Research Assistant, and her group testing their software at Mcity - U-M's model town for autonomous vehicles. Unlike most driverless cars, which are programmed by humans, Ozay's method uses a form of artificial intelligence. Given the vehicle specs, the rules of the road, and the laws of physics, their algorithm can program the car to drive safely.

Photo by Robert Coelius

Multimedia Producer

Communications and Marketing

College of Engineering

@UMengineering

Kindling and LoudFire Reading Series | MFA in Creative Writing

 

Photo by Samantha Fedorova | College of Humanities and Social Sciences | George Mason University

Colorado State University's College of Health and Human Sciences celebrates its graduates at the Spring 2022 Commencement. May 15, 2022

Pooja Mehta, Research Laboratory Tech Associate, constructs a hanging drop spheroid platform in the North Campus Research Complex on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on October 2, 2017.

 

The platform provides a 3D environment for ovarian cancer cells, enabling them to grow the same way they would in the body. They can use this model to test different medications and determine which ones work best on a given tumor.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Senior Multimedia Content Producer, University of Michigan - College of Engineering

Damen Provost, Managing Director of U-M Robotics Institute, greets guests at the first flight of M-Air, an advanced robotics testing facility for air, sea, and land, on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on February 20, 2018.

 

The facility is a netted, 9,600 gross square ft., four-story complex situated next to the site where the Ford Motor Company Robotics Building will open in late 2019.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing

Quyen Melina Bautista de los Santos, Research Fellow with Civil and Environmental Engineering, speaks at the 2019 Sustainability and Development Conference inside the Samuel T. Dana Building on Central Campus in Ann Arbor, MI. on Monday, October 14, 2019.

The four day event focused on themes such as sustainable development with indigenous peoples as well as water, sanitation, and health.

Bautista de los Santos joined four other speakers at a session dedicated to talking about challenges and opportunities for collaboration across research and professional sectors toward sustainable clean water supplies. Her talk focused primarily on contrasting water quality in intermittent vs. continuous water supply.

Photo: Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing

Elizabeth Agee, Environmental Engineering PhD Student, works to install sensors in the Amazon Rainforest outside of Santarém, Brazil on October 31, 2018.

 

Ivanov aims to collect water flow data from the trees to build a model that will help us gain an understanding of our push and pull on the region, and how it potentially affects the world’s climate.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing

Elizabeth Agee, Environmental Engineering PhD Student, works to install sensors in the Amazon Rainforest outside of Santarém, Brazil on October 31, 2018.

 

Ivanov aims to collect water flow data from the trees to build a model that will help us gain an understanding of our push and pull on the region, and how it potentially affects the world’s climate.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing

Colorado State University's College of Liberal Arts celebrates its graduates at the Spring Commencement. May 13, 2022

Colorado State University's College of Liberal Arts celebrates its graduates at the Spring Commencement. May 13, 2022

Zhongyuan Wo, Graduate Student Research Assistant at Civil and Environmental Engineering, adjusts an instrument that compares load drops in hopes of understanding how the geometry plays a fundamental role in the distribution of stresses in Miura Origami inside Evgueni Filipov’s laboratory located at 2144 GG Brown on North Campus Ann Arbor, MI. on Wednesday, February 27, 2018.

Photo by Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing.

Colorado State University's College of Liberal Arts celebrates its graduates at the Spring Commencement. May 13, 2022

The Amazon river outside of Santarém, Brazil on October 29, 2018.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing

Valeriy Ivanov, CEE Associate Professor, works to install sensors in the Amazon Rainforest outside of Santarém, Brazil on October 30, 2018.

 

Ivanov aims to collect water flow data from the trees to build a model that will help us gain an understanding of our push and pull on the region, and how it potentially affects the world’s climate.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing

Daniel Penley, Graduate Student Research Assistant in Mechanical Engineering, tries to verify lithium metal, solid-state batteries which use a solid electrolyte instead of the currently used flammable liquid electrolyte, inside the Battery Fabrication and Characterization User Facility at the Phoenix Memorial Laboratory at 2301 Bonisteel Blvd, at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on Friday May 7, 2021.

The University of Michigan is researching ways to harness abundant materials for battery production, or reuse older materials to relieve the disproportionate pressure placed on countries like the Democratic Republic of Congo for cobalt or the Philippines for nickel.

Photo: Robert Coelius/University of Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing

Drones are flown the first flight of M-Air, an advanced robotics testing facility for air, sea, and land, on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on February 20, 2018.

 

The facility is a netted, 9,600 gross square ft., four-story complex situated next to the site where the Ford Motor Company Robotics Building will open in late 2019.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing

BME Assistant Research Scienstist Ramkumar Tiruvannamalai Annamalai goes through the process steps with his team to develop injectable cell clusters that create micro-climates accelerating bone regeneration inside lab 2453 at the Ann and Robert H. Lurie Biomedical Engineering Building on July 19, 2019 in Ann Arbor, MI.

Expanded and primed progenitor cells, taken from bone marrow or fat tissues, are encased with biomaterials that give cues to regenerate bone more quickly than untreated cells.

The project, developed by BME Professor Jan Stegemann and lightheartedly called "bone spackle" envisions a scenario where you could use cells from other people and have a ready to use, off the shelf bone filling product primed to regenerate bone inside any body.

Photo by Robert Coelius/Michigan Engineering, Communications and Marketing

Jubilee Adeoye, Environmental Engineering PhD Student, works in the EWRE Building on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on December 5, 2018.

 

Adele uses novel cementitious materials for enhanced wellborn sealing for geologic sequestration of CO2.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing

Graham Harman, founder of Object-Oriented Ontology (OOO) and Professor of Philosophy and Associate Provost for Research Administration at the American University

 

The MA in Critical Theory and Creative Research at the Pacific Northwest College of Art and the Ford Institute for Visual Education

 

is pleased to announce a lecture by

 

GRAHAM HARMAN

“Greenberg, Heidegger, McLuhan, and the Arts”

 

PNCA Main Building, Swigert Commons

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

  

6:30 p.m.- 8:00 p.m.

   

About Graham Harman

  

Graham Harman is the founder of Object-Oriented Ontology (OOO) and the author of numerous books, including Tool-Being: Heidegger and the Metaphysics of Objects, Guerrilla Metaphysics: Phenomenology and the Carpentry of Things, Circus Philosophicus, The Quadruple Object, and, most recently, Quentin Meillassoux: Philosophy in the Making and Weird Realism: Lovecraft and Philosophy. He lives in Cairo, Egypt, where he is Professor of Philosophy and Associate Provost for Research Administration at the American University.

   

About the MA in Critical Theory and Creative Research

PNCA’s Master of Arts in Critical Theory and Creative Research (CT+CR) is an accelerated (45-credit), seminar-based program that prepares students for opportunities at the intersection of art, theory, and research. The program combines socio-political critique with process-driven inquiry, pushing both theory and research in new directions within the context of a 21st-century art school.

  

Photographer: Marshall Astor '13.

Colorado State University's College of Liberal Arts celebrates its graduates at the Spring Commencement. May 13, 2022

Inside the Autonomous Robotic Manipulation (ARM)Lab at 1212 Engineering Research Building II, Vinay Pilania, Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Electric Engineering and Computer Science watches as his algorithm directs massive KUKA robotic arms to select and delicately transfer the correct beanbag from a pile of random objects. This is an extremely under-explored area in autonomous manipulation, mainly because deformable objects are difficult to model and simulate.

Photo by Robert Coelius

Multimedia Producer

Communications and Marketing

Michigan Engineering

@UMengineering

Colorado State University's College of Liberal Arts celebrates its graduates at the Spring Commencement. May 13, 2022

USGS and members of the DROP Lab (droplab.engin.umich.edu) embark on the Great Lakes to test out their autonomous underwater vehicle that can conduct image surveys. This image data would then be post-processed with various neural networks to detect and record the numbers of fish and mussels of certain species. This system would then be used to determine the populations of these species across the great lakes.

Photo by Robert Coelius

Multimedia Producer

Communications & Marketing, Michigan Engineering

@UMengineering

 

An autonomous vehicle drives while it is being attacked over Wifi in the M-Air Facility on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on September 28, 2018.

 

Westley Weimer, CSE Professor, and his group of researchers have created "Trusted and Resilient Mission Operation," software that hardens autonomous vehicles to detect and repair current attacks, and prevent future attacks.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing

Graduate students display their research at the Graduate Research and Creativity Showcase. November 9, 2017

Graduate students display their research at the Graduate Research and Creativity Showcase. November 9, 2017

DVM/PhD Student, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, August 16, 2021

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