Three Favorite Results
Conventional wisdom says good things come in threes. Recently I reflected on the research I’ve conducted over my career to date and selected my three favorite results, which I will cover in this talk. For each one I’ll explain the context and motivation, the result itself, and why it ranks as one of my favorites. I’ll also make an attempt to decipher what the results have in common. The three results span computer science foundations, system implementation, and user interface questions, and they represent three of my favorite research areas: semistructured data, data streams, and uncertain data.
- Series:
- Microsoft Research Talks
- Date:
- Speakers:
- Jennifer Widom
- Affiliation:
- Stanford University
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Casey Anderson
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Series: Microsoft Research Talks
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Galea: The Bridge Between Mixed Reality and Neurotechnology
Speakers:- Eva Esteban,
- Conor Russomanno
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Current and Future Application of BCIs
Speakers:- Christoph Guger
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Challenges in Evolving a Successful Database Product (SQL Server) to a Cloud Service (SQL Azure)
Speakers:- Hanuma Kodavalla,
- Phil Bernstein
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Improving text prediction accuracy using neurophysiology
Speakers:- Sophia Mehdizadeh
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DIABLo: a Deep Individual-Agnostic Binaural Localizer
Speakers:- Shoken Kaneko
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Recent Efforts Towards Efficient And Scalable Neural Waveform Coding
Speakers:- Kai Zhen
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Audio-based Toxic Language Detection
Speakers:- Midia Yousefi
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From SqueezeNet to SqueezeBERT: Developing Efficient Deep Neural Networks
Speakers:- Sujeeth Bharadwaj
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Hope Speech and Help Speech: Surfacing Positivity Amidst Hate
Speakers:- Monojit Choudhury
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'F' to 'A' on the N.Y. Regents Science Exams: An Overview of the Aristo Project
Speakers:- Peter Clark
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Checkpointing the Un-checkpointable: the Split-Process Approach for MPI and Formal Verification
Speakers:- Gene Cooperman
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Learning Structured Models for Safe Robot Control
Speakers:- Ashish Kapoor
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