Events

Multi-Scale Biomechanics of Blood Flow for Vascular Development, Repair, and Rejuvenation

Teer 106

Abstract: During cardiovascular development, peristaltic contraction of the embryonic heart tube produces time-varying hemodynamic forces and pressure gradients across the atrioventricular canal. However, the relative importance of myocardial contraction and hemodynamic force to modulate cardiovascular morphogenesis in the non-Newtonian flow regime remains poorly understood. By developing the 4-D light-sheet fluorescent microscope and post-imaging machine-learning algorithms, […]

CEE Seminar – Generative AI for the statistical computation of fluids

Wilkinson Building, room 021 auditorium

In recent years, there has been growing interest in applying neural networks to the data-driven approximation of partial differential equations (PDEs). In this talk, we present GenCFD, a generative AI algorithm for fast, accurate, and robust statistical computation of three-dimensional turbulent fluid flows. On a set of challenging fluid flows, GenCFD provides an accurate approximation […]

CEE Seminar – Prediction and understanding of turbulent transport in realistic urban boundary layers

Wilkinson Building, room 021 auditorium

Motivated by the need to better understand and predict exchange processes between the land surface and the atmosphere and their impact on weather and climate, the past decades have seen substantial efforts devoted to studying atmospheric turbulence within and above natural and built environments. The current understanding of such a flow phenomenon is largely rooted […]

From Gambits to Assurances: Game-Theoretic Integration of Safety and Learning for Human-Centered Robotics

Wilkinson Building, room 130

From autonomous vehicles navigating busy intersections to quadrupeds deployed in household environments, robots must operate safely and efficiently around people in uncertain and unstructured situations. However, today's robots still struggle to robustly handle low-probability events without becoming overly conservative. In this talk, I will discuss how planning in the joint space of physical and information […]

CEE Seminar – Biofilm viscoelasticity promotes persistence

Wilkinson Building, room 021 auditorium

Biofilms are viscoelastic materials. Biofilm viscoelasticity is an evolved property of these communities, and the production of multiple extracellular polymeric slime components appears to be a mechanism to ensure the development of biofilms with complex viscoelastic properties. However the importance of this attribute to the survival and persistence of these microbial communities is yet to […]

Experimental and analytical methods for movement rehabilitation and assessment in the community

Hudson Hall 125

Preventing injury and restoring mobility following injury, both musculoskeletal and neuromuscular, is challenging. In recent years, the fields of biomechanics and clinical rehabilitation have informed the development of wearable devices and assessment tools that aid in rehabilitation and in maintaining mobility. Wearable exosystems are assistive devices that can target weakness in a specific joint or […]

CEE Seminar – Stressing the Strain in Transcranial Ultrasound Simulation

Wilkinson Building, room 021 auditorium

Transcranial ultrasound stimulation (TUS) has the promise of modulating deep brain structures with small focal spots. Early work by Fry (Science 1958) in modulating the visual system is reproducible and yielding valuable insights due to the extensive knowledge of the visual system and easy accessibility to study it. There is a multitude of new studies […]

Robots that Evolve on Demand

LSRC B101 Love Auditorium

Robots are traditionally designed with fixed physical hardware and control policies that make them specialized for repetitive tasks and structured environments. This talk discusses foundational work toward robots that "evolve on demand," morphing their bodies and adapting their behaviors to accommodate multiple tasks in diverse environments. First, I will introduce robotic structures made from stiffness-changing […]

Advancing Multi-Agent Systems with Scalable Learning and Control

Hudson Hall 125

Efficient and resilient coordination among autonomous agents plays an important role in various domains such as energy management, robotic swarms, autonomous vehicles and beyond. As these systems grow in complexity and scale, the challenge of achieving optimal coordination becomes increasingly difficult. The first part of the talk will focus on tackling scalability issues by leveraging […]

CEE Seminar – Biological phosphorus removal through the lens of microbial ecosystems biology

Wilkinson Building, room 021 auditorium

Biological wastewater treatment systems are ideal models with which to study "eco-systems biology" of microbial communities. Polyphosphate accumulating bacteria are used world-wide to remove phosphorus from wastewater but the most abundant phylogenetically defined group (Candidatus Accumulibacter) cannot be cultured in isolation. I will describe advances in our understanding of Accumulibacter ecophysiology based on comparative genomics […]

Unlocking the Power of Storytelling in Our Classrooms

Hudson Hall 218

Our next KEEN-sponsored Lunch-N'-Learn. These workshops are focused on engineering education topics that could benefit faculty instructors and our students. Lunch is provided. RSVP: https://duke.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_8v01bDKVbkkMQFU