This page provides a list of seminars that will be presented on the dates specified at 1:00 pm in the Room G34 of the Owheo Building (133 Union Street East). Where available, an abstract of the seminar can be displayed by clicking on the title of the seminar.
If you wish to be added to a mailing list in order to automatically receive announcements of the weekly seminars, then please send an e-mail message to the seminar list administrator .
March 1
Amplified Human Senses - Enhancing Visual Perception Using Computational Glasses
Tobias Langlotz, Department of Information Science
March 8
Reading the Brain: Depressivity Prediction with EEG signals
Shenghuan Zhang, Department of Computer Science
March 15
Sensor Data Collection in Industrial Wireless Networks
Bjorn Scheuermann, Humboldt University of Berlin
March 22
Democracy by
Design: Basic Democracy and the Self-Organisation of Collective
Governance
Jeremy Pitt, Department of Electrical &
Electronic Engineering, Imperial College London
March 29
"Shift" is turning two: A caregiver's report
Claudia Ott, Department of Information Science
April 5
Smartphone and low-cost multi-GNSS RTK positioning:
current and future status
Dr Robert Odolinski, Senior Lecturer, School of Surveying, University of Otago
April 12
Solving Burglary Offences:
Building a Model to Predict Clearance of Burglary Following Initial
Investigation
Anindya Banerjee, Department of Economics, University of Birmingham
April 19
No Seminar - Good Friday
May 3
Coordination, variability and
randomness in sport
Peter Lamb, School of Physical Education
May 10
Being There Together?
Anthony Steed, Department of Computer Science, University College London
May 17
Hybrid Ethics
Professor Andrew McStay, Bangor University, UK
May 24
An information retrieval based approach to activity recognition in smart homes
Brendon Woodford, Department of Information Science
May 31
Routing and Wavelength Assignment for Multicast Communication in Optical Network-on-Chip (ONoC)
Wen Yang, Department of Computer Science
14 June
Towards Reasoning in the presence of
code of unknown provenance - or, trust and risk in an open world
James Noble, Department of Computer Science, Victoria University of
Wellington
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