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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210811
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210814
DTSTAMP:20210712T185945Z
CREATED:20210709T202403Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210712T185945Z
UID:44763-1628640000-1628899199@citris-uc.org
SUMMARY:Transatlantic Telehealth Research Network (TTRN) PhD Summer Course
DESCRIPTION:The Transatlantic Telehealth Research Network (TTRN) invites you to participate in the online PhD summer course\, Future Digital Technologies in Healthcare: How to design\, test and assess the value of digital technologies and services that engage\, empower\, and motivate patients. \nAims of the program: \n\nTo give a comprehensive introduction to research methods used in digital technologies in healthcare on how to design\, test and evaluate the technologies and services that engage\, empower\, and motivate patients\nTo present new digital technologies\, theories and research methods in the design\, assessment and implementation of digital health technologies. During the course the students will examine the possibilities for using the methods in their own Ph.D. project\nTo give PhD students the possibility to create networks with other Danish and international PhD students and international researchers\n\nWho can participate? \nThis course is relevant for Ph.D. students that are working on projects to design\, assess or implement digital health technologies. This course is also relevant for Ph.D. students studying methodological aspects of health technologies in general. The course is interdisciplinary and relevant for students from medical\, technical and social science faculty. Participants must submit a five page paper one week before the course about a research question related to their Ph.D. project and feedback will be given during the course (template will be provided). \nClick here to download the full program. \nDates: August 11th – 13th\, 2021 \nLocation: Online via Zoom \nCredits: 2 ECTS \nPrice: $365 USD \nRegistration Deadline: August 4th \nHow to Register: Click here to register. For more information\, please contact Dr. Birthe Dinesen at bid@hst.aau.dk.
URL:https://citris-uc.org/event/transatlantic-telehealth-research-network-ttrn-phd-summer-course/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:CITRIS Health
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210819
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210820
DTSTAMP:20240216T013653Z
CREATED:20210818T201220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240216T013653Z
UID:44990-1629331200-1629417599@citris-uc.org
SUMMARY:CITRIS Aviation Prize: RFP opens
DESCRIPTION:Celebrate National Aviation Day on August 19\, 2021 by signing up for the first-ever CITRIS Aviation Prize! \nCreated in collaboration with the Institute for Transportation Studies at UC Berkeley\, this competition challenges student teams to design\, develop and demonstrate a long-distance\, fully autonomous flight with a small UAV. We invite student teams from our four CITRIS campuses – UC Berkeley\, UC Davis\, UC Merced\, UC Santa Cruz – to compete. The winning proposal will be recognized with the first CITRIS Aviation Design Prize\, including a $2\,000 cash award and up to $25\,000 to demonstrate the actual flight in Spring 2022. \nTimeline\n\nTeam Registration Open: Aug. 19\, 2021\, to Oct. 15\, 2021\nProposal Submissions Due: Nov. 19\, 2021\nProposal Winner Announced: Dec. 17\, 2021\nWinning Flight Plan Executed by End of Academic Year: Spring 2022\n\nLearn more & register on the CITRIS Aviation Prize webpage.
URL:https://citris-uc.org/event/citris-aviation-prize-rfp-opens/
LOCATION:CA
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210824T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210824T190000
DTSTAMP:20210818T225453Z
CREATED:20210818T225453Z
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UID:44997-1629828000-1629831600@citris-uc.org
SUMMARY:Society\, Robots and Us: Inclusive Investment
DESCRIPTION:Our next ‘conversation that matters’ is on inclusive investment for robotics. Join us at 6 pm PDT on Tuesday August 24th\, 2021. \n\n\n\n\n\n\nAbout this event\n\n\nFollowing our “COVID-19\, Robots and Us” series\, we’re continuing the conversation about important robotics topics and socio-technical issues. We’ll be inviting domain experts and interesting thinkers to discuss topics relating to robotics innovation\, commercialization and inclusivity. Mainly\, we’re inviting YOU to share your thoughts about inclusive robotics\, what is it? Why do we need it? And what do we do to get it?  \nModerated by Andra Keay of Silicon Valley Robotics \nGuest speakers this week: \n\nKira Gardner\, CITRIS Foundry\nMichael Harries\, The Robotics Hub\nSwati Chaturvedi\, PropelX\nKen Goldberg\, artist and roboticist\n\nCatch our previous episodes on Silicon Valley Robotics youtube channel \nAcknowledgment: Your hosts are speaking from the traditional lands of the Mewukma Ohlone People\, who remain unrecognized in US Federal Law.
URL:https://citris-uc.org/event/society-robots-and-us-inclusive-investment/
LOCATION:Zoom
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ORGANIZER;CN="Silicon Valley Robotics":MAILTO:andra@svrobo.org
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210830T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210830T170000
DTSTAMP:20210825T002917Z
CREATED:20210824T235851Z
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UID:45010-1630339200-1630342800@citris-uc.org
SUMMARY:DREAMS/CPAR/BDD Seminar - Matt Beane on Sensitivity Theory
DESCRIPTION:CITRIS People and Robots hosts a weekly seminar series every Monday afternoon jointly with UC Berkeley’s “Design of Robotics and Embedded systems\, Analysis\, and Modeling” Seminars (DREAMS). \nSPEAKER: Matt Beane \nTITLE: Sensitivity Theory: Explaining How Workers in Deskilled Jobs Advance within an Organization \nZOOM: https://berkeley.zoom.us/j/97238125697 \n \nABSTRACT: Millions work in deskilled jobs\, and prior research suggests that advancing out of these jobs within an organization is uniquely difficult: \nin order to advance\, workers must demonstrate skills other than those that their current position gives them the opportunity to develop. Through our two year\, nationwide\, multi-sited ethnographic study of AI-enabled robotics in e-commerce and parcel warehousing\, we both reveal the profound challenges to internal advancement out of actively deskilled jobs and the systematic ways in which a small minority of workers managed to do so\, in spite of these challenges. In particular\, we show that workers advanced by capitalizing on a “sensitivity”: an attunement to a domain of organizational operations\, experienced as some combination of fascination and irritation and enacted through small attempts to understand or address related problems. The remainder of sensitivity theory accounts for the practices and organizational conditions that allow workers in deskilled jobs to develop sensitivity-related skills\, add value in their organization and advance into jobs that are not deskilled. Beyond this core contribution\, sensitivity theory helps us predict individual career trajectories\, the talent-related dynamics of automation\, deskilling and workplace skill polarization\, and better understand the diversity of work-related human capability. \nBIO: Matt Beane is an Assistant Professor in Technology Management at the University of California\, Santa Barbara and a Digital Fellow with both Stanford’s Digital Economy Lab and MIT’s Institute for the Digital Economy. He received his PhD and Masters from the Sloan School of Management at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the Information Technologies department. In between his doctoral studies and his current professorship\, Beane helped found and fund Humatics\, an MIT-connected\, full-stack internet of things startup. Its mission is to drive seamless collaboration between humans\, machines\, and infrastructure. Beane conducts field research on work involving robots and AI to help us understand the implications of intelligent machines for the broader world. All of his projects involve many hundreds of hours—sometimes years—watching\, interviewing\, and often working side by side with people who use robots to get their jobs done. And unlike most social scientists\, each of his studies is designed to uncover success in conditions where we would expect failure. Finding these “positive needles” in the negative haystack of technological progress allows Beane to offer unique insights that can guide us as we try to navigate the future we’re building for ourselves. \nCurrently\, Beane is leading a team engaged in unprecedented—nationwide\, multi-organizational\, longitudinal—research on AI-enabled robots in e-commerce warehousing\, looking for conditions in which frontline workers and their organizations adapt particularly well and rapidly to the introduction of these systems. He has also studied robotic surgery\, robotic materials transport\, and robotic telepresence in healthcare\, elder care\, and knowledge work. He is likewise in the midst of applied research to develop two intelligent technologies to address the challenges evident in his prior studies. \nBeane’s award-winning research on robotic surgery has been published in premier management journals such as Administrative Science Quarterly and Organization Science\, and Harvard Business Review. In 2012\, he was selected as a Human Robot Interaction Pioneer\, and in 2021 he was named to the Thinkers50 Radar list. He is a regular contributor to popular outlets such as Wired\, MIT Technology Review\, TechCrunch\, and Forbes. When he isn’t studying the intersection of intelligent tech and apprenticeship—which is hardly ever—he likes to play the guitar\, cook with his wife Kristen\, and read science fiction. \n\nABOUT THE SERIES: CITRIS People and Robots hosts a weekly seminar series every Monday afternoon jointly with UC Berkeley’s “Design of Robotics and Embedded systems\, Analysis\, and Modeling” Seminars (DREAMS). Seminars will be held in room 250 Sutardja Dai Hall on Mondays from 4-5 PM and available online via webcast. \nSign up to receive the latest news and updates from CITRIS: http://bit.ly/SubscribeCITRIS
URL:https://citris-uc.org/event/dreams-cpar-bdd-seminar-matt-beane-on-sensitivity-theory/
LOCATION:Zoom
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