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AI and Data Science: Applications for a Connected World
• Broadcast Live from JHU Alumni Weekend, presented by Hopkins at Home • Sponsored by the Whiting School of Engineering, featuring Prof. Mark Dredze •
Mark Dredze, a renowned expert in computational linguistics and machine learning, discusses the groundbreaking research and initiatives at the J...
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Dean's Notebook | Star Trek, Science Fiction, and the Future
• Sponsored by the Whiting School of Engineering •
• Presented by Hopkins at Home •Our Dean's Notebook series kicks off 2025 with an engaging live webinar featuring Ed Schlesinger, Dean of the Whiting School of Engineering at Johns Hopkins University.
Star Trek, Science Fiction, and the Fut...
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Advancing the Science of Arts Health and Wellbeing Through Neuroarts
Scientific studies increasingly confirm what human beings across cultures and throughout time have long recognized: we are wired for art.
The International Arts + Mind Lab Center for Applied Neuroaesthetics (IAM Lab), a multidisciplinary research-to-practice initiative from the Pedersen Brain Sc...
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#iVOTED - Music and Civic Duty
In this Hopkins at Home discussion, Megan Ihnen, Peab '09 (MMUS) is joined by SNF Agora Visiting Fellow and #iVoted founder, Emily White, to discuss how her organization produces record-breaking events and works with entertainment venues to admit fans who show a selfie either from outside their p...
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Theatrical Stargazing: Art and Science in Brecht's 'Galileo'
Explore the nexus of Art and Science with the Director of the Johns Hopkins University's Theatre Arts and Studies program, Abraham Stoll, discussing their 2024 Spring production of Brecht’s "Galileo" with James Glossman, the play's director, and Marco Chiaberge, ESA/AURA Astronomer at the Space T...
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Tuning In: The Peabody Laptop Ensemble
The Peabody Laptop Ensemble serves as a meeting point between acoustic and electronic instruments and various technological devices such as laptops, phones, and Arduinos; musicians from various backgrounds have the opportunity to participate and collaborate together in music making that is unique...
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How Artificial Intelligence Will Impact the 2024 Elections
Advances in AI make it faster, easier, and relatively inexpensive to create messaging that can be difficult to distinguish between fake and real. These new AI tools create fertile ground to create election claims and counterclaims that may be false. In this live, virtual conversation, technology ...
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Bioastronautics Symposium: Genomics in Space
Presented by the JHU Human Spaceflight Lab, the Whiting School of Engineering Office of Research and Translation, and Hopkins at Home.
In the near future, government spaceflights will become more ambitious, with the NASA Artemis program sending people back to the moon (and later missions going ...
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The James Webb Space Telescope: Revealing the Early Universe
With the Hubble Space Telescope, we have looked back in time and witnessed a rich diversity of galaxies growing, merging, and taking shape over 13 billion years of cosmic history. But the most distant galaxies in the early universe are too small and faint to study in detail with Hubble, leaving u...
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Hopkins on the Hill: How Will Extreme Materials Save The World? - Teaser
Hopkins at Home on the Hill: How Will Extreme Materials Save The World?
Wednesday, May 19, 2021 @12:00PM EDT
For more information visit: https://www.jhu.edu/hopkinsathome/ -
Session 3: Music and Technology in the 21st Century
Thomas Dolby - the Homewood Professor of the Arts and head of the Peabody Conservatory’s Music for New Media program - answers the question: "Why use music in films?" in this detailed explanation of the history and conventions of musical scoring for films and TV, with a look into the future of in...
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Session 2: Music and Technology in the 21st Century
For musicians hoping to get experience in a professional recording studio, or those wanting to hone their home recording chops—or just music fans!—here is a primer on how a recording session is conducted, how to prepare and rehearse for it, and the roles of the musicians, producer and sound engin...
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Session 1: Music and Technology in the 21st Century
If you’re a singer or instrumentalist that learned about music using "conventional" notation, sight reading and ear training, this presentation on "How do computers think about music?" will teach you the fundamentals of computer music software such as MIDI sequencers and digital audio workstation...
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Asteroid Impact: DART Mission Systems Engineer
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Space Surgery
Space Surgery; for this event, as well as similar events in the future, involving various topics related to human spaceflight. These events are hosted by the Commercial and Government Program Office of the Johns Hopkins University Whiting School of Engineering.
SPEAKERS; Dr. Mark Shelhamer, Dr. ...
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Shaping the Curve: Maryam Mirzakhani’s Influence on the Field of Mathematics
In partnership with the Center for Talented Youth, you are invited to join a conversation with CTY's Senior Program Manager for math, Anjula Batra, film Director, George Paul Csicsery, and Johns Hopkins 2020 President's Frontier Award winner, Emily Riehl. They will discuss the importance of Mirza...
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Session 6: Eating in the Anthropocene: Food on a Systemic Level
"You are what you eat” is a phrase familiar to many but what do you really know about food systems and diets? This course examines the complex interactions between food systems, diets, and the environment, as well as the political, social, and ethical issues to achieve both human and planetary he...
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Session 4: Eating in the Anthropocene: Social & Equity Issues
"You are what you eat” is a phrase familiar to many but what do you really know about food systems and diets? This course examines the complex interactions between food systems, diets, and the environment, as well as the political, social, and ethical issues to achieve both human and planetary he...
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Session 3: Eating in the Anthropocene: Diets, Food Systems, and Climate Change
"You are what you eat” is a phrase familiar to many but what do you really know about food systems and diets? This course examines the complex interactions between food systems, diets, and the environment, as well as the political, social, and ethical issues to achieve both human and planetary he...
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Session 5: Eating in the Anthropocene: Food on an Individual Level
"You are what you eat” is a phrase familiar to many but what do you really know about food systems and diets? This course examines the complex interactions between food systems, diets, and the environment, as well as the political, social, and ethical issues to achieve both human and planetary he...
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Session 1: Eating in the Anthropocene: Food Systems
"You are what you eat” is a phrase familiar to many, but what do you really know about food systems and diets? This course examines the complex interactions between food systems, diets, and the environment, as well as the political, social, and ethical issues to achieve both human and planetary h...
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Session 2: Eating in the Anthropocene: Diets, Health, and Malnutrition
"You are what you eat” is a phrase familiar to many, but what do you really know about food systems and diets? This course examines the complex interactions between food systems, diets, and the environment, as well as the political, social, and ethical issues to achieve both human and planetary h...
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Session 4: Quantum Sensing
Imagine a world where you can monitor the movement of magma within the Earth’s crust, peer around the corner without moving, and detect initial signs of degenerative disease. Welcome to the quantum world! This course will introduce you to the weird and wondrous quantum world and quantum sensing, ...
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Session 3: Quantum Sensing
Imagine a world where you can monitor the movement of magma within the Earth’s crust, peer around the corner without moving, and detect initial signs of degenerative disease. Welcome to the quantum world! This course will introduce you to the weird and wondrous quantum world and quantum sensing, ...