Speakers
61 matches found
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Sewn in Memory: AIDS Quilt Panels from Central Illinois, at the Spurlock Museum of World Cultures, features over a dozen quilt panels originally made in the 1980s and early 1990s for the AIDS Memorial Quilt, in Washington, DC. Each of the panels commemorates a person who died of AIDS, or of an AIDS-related ailment.
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Women@NCSA invites you to join us on Zoom from 2–3 p.m. to hear from Dr. Sue Stock, Associate Director of Clinical Services, Counseling Center of University of Illinois, on “Mindful Matter: How to Manage Stress Related to Change.”
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What would you say to your younger self about teaching and learning? Our final seminar of the Fall semester features a panel of veteran faculty members reflecting on some of their earliest teaching experiences. Each of them will share funny stories and lessons learned about themselves, their students, and the art of good teaching.
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In this talk, Kaiyu Guan provides an overview of the background on agriculture carbon credit and then focus on the quantification of field-level carbon credit, including the issues in the conventional methods, and our proposed “System-of-Systems” solution that leverages various sources of sensing data, process-based modeling, and AI-based Model-Data Fusion methods.
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For the second event in our Alumni Lecture series, we welcome Dr. des. Catherine Keane (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich). Dr. Keane's work focuses on ecclesiastical monuments in relation to agricultural and industrial facilities in the Mediterranean world from the 4th to 9th centuries. Join us on Zoom or in 319 Gregory Hall.
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Professor, Dr. Juliet Schor from Boston College will be presenting on Gig Labor and Sharing Platforms.
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Lectures and discussions on current work in research and development in nuclear engineering and related fields by staff, advanced students, and visiting speakers.
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"Temporal controls over cortical neuron fate diversity." Department of Basic Neurosciences.
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This pre-recorded video will feature RBML curators recreating historical recipes from our collections in a home kitchen. Follow along at home by visiting our YouTube channel at go.library.illinois.edu/RBMLYouTube!
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This two for one workshop includes an overview of private foundation funding followed by a close look at locating funders in the Foundation Directory Online Professional. Topics to be covered include a demonstration on Foundation Directory Online Professional, how to interpret the information found there, instruction on the use of CINRC community materials, and more.
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Wrap It Up in Stories, a free, family-friendly program focuses on two activities. First, participants will practice a variety of gift-wrapping styles, including furoshiki, a traditional Japanese method. Secondly, a Japanese/English bilingual storytelling session will be held.
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Dr. Rosemary Braun will discuss her recent work on nonparametric, model-free methods to analyze circadian transcriptomic data by exploiting results from dynamical systems theory, nonlinear dimension reduction, and topological data analysis.
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Women in Science - December Lecture Guest Speaker: Dr. Zahra Mohaghegh December 14, 2021 @ 12:00pm CST via Zoom December 14th guest speaker Dr. Zahra Mohaghegh is an Associate Professor of Nuclear, Plasma, & Radiological Engineering.
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Abstract: In Chicago and elsewhere across the U.S., Latinx and Black communities have experienced disproportionate morbidity and mortality from COVID-19, highlighting drastic health inequities. Testing and vaccination efforts need to be scaled up within communities disproportionately affected by economic vulnerability, housing instability, limited healthcare access, and in
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Abstract: In Chicago and elsewhere across the U.S., Latinx and Black communities have experienced disproportionate morbidity and mortality from COVID-19, highlighting drastic health inequities. Testing and vaccination efforts need to be scaled up within communities disproportionately affected by economic vulnerability, housing instability, limited healt