The Distinguished Lecturer Series (DLS) is a notably successful annual program that attracts accomplished scientists to Stony Brook University. DLS brings together undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty to discuss current topics in computer science and the series motivates students to become involved in research initiatives. Distinguished lecturers have the opportunity to share their knowledge with a broad constituency and the series bolsters the stature of the Department of Computer Science on a national-level. Since it began in the fall 2000, DLS has developed into a premier forum for innovators in computer science from around the world.
This year's 2016-17 DLS kicks off with Professor Nick Feamster from Princeton University. Dr. Feamster's talk is entitled "Information Control in the Digital Age". Dr. Feamster's abstract will be posted a few days prior to the talk. The full DLS scheduled is presented below. All DLS talks take place at 2:30p in Room 120 of the New CS Building.
If you have questions about the talk or if you would like to present at future DLS talks, please contact Professor Jie Gao, jgao [at] cs.stonybrook.edu.
Fall 2016 to Spring 2017 DLS Schedule
Nick Feamster, Princeton University
Title: Information Control in the Digital Age
Time: Friday October 7th, 2016 at 2:30pm
Location: New Computer Science Building 120
Rahul Mangharam, University of Pennsylvania
Title: 3 Challenge Problems with Cyber Physical Systems and IoT
Time: Friday November 18th, 2016 at 2:30pm
Location: New Computer Science Building 120
Alex Aiken, Stanford University
Title: Programming Heterogeneous, Distributed Parallel Machines
Time: Wednesday, January 25th, 2017 at 2:30pm
Location: New Computer Science Building 120
Moshe Vardi, Rice University
Title: The Automated-Reasoning Revolution: From Theory to Practice and Back
Time: Friday, February 24th, 2017 at 2:30pm
Location: New Computer Science Building 120
Carla P. Gomes, Cornell University
Title: Challenges for AI in Computational Sustainability
Time: Friday, March 10th, 2017 at 2:30pm
Location: New Computer Science Building 120
Steven Salzberg, Johns Hopkins University
Title: Transcriptome Assembly: Computational Challenges of Next-Generation Sequence Data
Updated Date/Time: Wednesday November 1 2017 at 2:30pm
Location: New Computer Science Building 120