Author: Editor (Page 6 of 9)

2016 CS Highlights

Catch up on 2016 by reading a note from the chair and checking out these highlights from around the CS department from the past year.

Press

Wellesley CS at Conferences and Competitions

Local CS Events

 

CS Fun

Happy 2017!

A note from the chair

Can you hear that? The CS department is buzzing! There are over 200 CS and MAS majors and minors, and the majority of all Wellesley students take one or more CS classes. The CS Club is bustling, with its organization of talks, workshops, social activities, and other CS related events, including the bi-annual hackathon, WHACK, that is always hugely popular.

Our curriculum continues to evolve rapidly in response to the changing landscape of the field. The ever popular CS 110 has been redesigned into a new course, CS 115 Computing for the Socio-Techno Web, that is the gateway to the MAS major. Further, we have introduced a number of other new courses this year, including Scientific and Parallel Computing, Introduction to Front-End Web Development (think of this as a more advanced version of CS 110), Distributed Computing, Machine Learning, and together with the Neuroscience program a new seminar for first-year students only called Brains, Minds, and Machines: The Science of Intelligence.

This year, we were thrilled to welcome new faculty member, Dr. Ashley DeFlumere, with expertise in parallel scientific computation. Beloved professor, Takis Metaxas, is on sabbatical leave at the moment, but fear not, he is not far away as he has taken on the role of Director of the impressive Albright Institute at the College. And as I write this, the department is conducting a search and interviewing candidates for multiple new faculty positions so that it can continue to provide exciting novel curricular offerings and meet the growing demand from students for research opportunities, outreach, and extracurricular engagement.

The capstone CS Poster Fair has morphed this year into the CS Senior Summit, which now includes short talks as well as poster sessions of seniors presenting their work, and it culminates in a distinguished alumnae panel. There are even rumors afoot about a possible renovation / new building addition to the Science Center, which is bursting with activity. Keep your eyes and ears open for further updates.

As always, one of our favorite things is hearing from alumnae. So please, please, please, stay in touch, drop us a line, or best of all, come visit!!!

 

Brian Tjaden

Chair, Computer Science Department

Takis Metaxas appointed faculty director of Albright Institute

Our colleague Takis Metaxas was appointed the next faculty director of the Albright Institute.  This January’s Institute featured an extensive computer science presence with 2 Wellesley CS alumnae speakers, 2 Wellesley CS faculty speakers, plus 2 other talks on topics in technology.

 

Navigating a Global Internet

Heather West ’07, Senior Policy Manager, Mozilla

Policy in a Bits + Atoms World

Betsy Masiello ’03, Senior Director, Public Policy & Economics, Uber

 

Biotechnology in the World Today

Brian Tjaden, Professor and Chair of Computer Science, Wellesley College

Building a Better World: Engineering, Leadership, and the Liberal Arts

Amy Banzaert, Director of Engineering Studies and Lecturer in Engineering, Wellesley College

(with Lyn Turbak, Associate Professor, Computer Science)

 

Anonymity and Reason

Harry Lewis, Gordon McKay Professor of Computer Science, Harvard University, John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences

Fake News, Real Consequences

Craig Silverman, Media Editor, BuzzFeed News

 

Wellesley Daily Shot features TwitterTrails

The Wellesley Daily Shot highlighted the media and education impacts of TwitterTrails, the work of Takis Metaxas, Eni Mustafaraj, and several student researchers.

Fall 2016 CS Colloquium Speakers

The Fall 2016 CS Colloquium series, organized by Hess Fellow Sravana Reddy, featured talks on everything from tools for social scientists and data scientists, computer security, natural language processing, and human-computer interaction.

 

Friday, Nov 4: Jordan Suchow, UC Berkeley
Experiment design, algorithm design, and automation in the behavioral and social sciences

Tuesday, Nov 8: Andrea Parker, Northeastern University
Community Wellness Informatics: Creating Technology for Health Equity

Friday, Nov 11: Abhi Shelat, Northeastern University
Secure Stable Matchings

Monday, Nov 14: Mor Naaman, Cornell Tech
Awareness, Coordination and Trust in the Peer Economy

Friday, Nov 18: Su Lin Blodgett ’15, UMass Amherst
Dialectal variation in social media: A case study of African-American English

Wednesday, Nov 30: Karen Livescu, Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago
Continuous Vector Representations of (Spoken and Written) Words

Friday, Dec 9: Emma Tosch ’08, UMass Amherst
Programming Language and Systems Research for Data Scientists

 

In addition, the department hosted a panel on graduate school in computer science with Danae Metaxa-Kakavouli, graduate student in CS and HCI at Stanford University (yes you may recognize those last names!), and Vicky Zeamer MAS ’15, currently a student in the MIT Comparative Media Studies Program.

Marissa Avila ’07 led a discussion of the Where’s Wellesley app.

Students and faculty form new Systems Reading Club

The new Wellesley CS Systems Reading Club, sponsored by Ashley DeFlumere, Ben Wood, and Christine Bassem (a.k.a. “ABC systems”) drew a range of students and faculty who met weekly to read and discuss classic or cutting-edge research papers in the area of computer systems, broadly defined.  Each week, one or two students led discussion about the week’s paper.  Topics included operating systems and virtualization, NASA hardware, quantum computing, distributed network protocols, reasoning about concurrency, voting system security, and more.  Hopefully we will be back for more in future semesters!

Daily Shot features Wellesley makers

Wellesley makers were featured in the Daily Shot.

Students hack for social good at CS Club’s WHACK Fall 2016

The student-run Wellesley Computer Science Club’s Fall 2016 WHACK hackathon drew 80 participants to hack for social good in partnership with several Boston area organizations.

Clara Sorenson ’18 and Anne Schwartz ’18 present Habitat Explorer at ACM ISS

Clara Sorenson ’18, Anne Schwartz ’18, and Eni Mustafaraj traveled to Niagara Falls in November, where Clara and Anne presented a poster on their work on Habitat Explorer at the ACM International Conference on Interactive Surfaces and Spaces.  Habitat Explorer is a collaborative educational game for large-screen multi-touch displays that introduces children to basic concepts of data collection and data science.  Clara and Anne developed the game for the MultiTaction displays in the Wellesley HCI Lab during the 2016 Summer Research Program.

Wellesley at Grace Hopper Celebration 2016

Several Wellesley students, alums, and faculty converged in October for the 2016 Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing.  Jenny Wang ’17 also caught up with C of CLRS.

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