EVENT    Prof. Paris Smaragdis of UIUC to give keynote at MERL's Virtual Open House

Date released: December 6, 2022


  •  EVENT    Prof. Paris Smaragdis of UIUC to give keynote at MERL's Virtual Open House
  • Date & Time:

    Monday, December 12, 2022; 1:00pm - 5:30pm

  • Location:

    MERL, Virtual

  • Description:

    MERL is excited to announce the featured keynote speaker for our Virtual Open House 2022:
    Prof. Paris Smaragdis from University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

    Our virtual open house will take place on December 12, 2022, 1:00pm - 5:30pm (EST).

    Join us to learn more about who we are, what we do, and discuss our internship and employment opportunities. Prof. Smaragdis' talk is scheduled for 3:15pm - 3:45pm (EST).

    Registration: https://mailchi.mp/merl/voh2022

    Keynote Title: Dragging Audio Processing Past the 1970s (and the 2010s!)
    Abstract: Audio processing has not changed appreciably in the last 50 years. However, novel tasks, new computational demands, attention to human-centered evaluation, and a strong influence from machine learning, all point towards new ways of thinking about sound. In this talk I will go over multiple examples of how one can modernize standard audio processing in order to serve ambitious project goals. I will specifically talk about the use of meta learning for adaptive filtering, and how we can outperform humans in the game of optimizer design; I will show new ways to represent and process time series based on graph networks that results in highly desirable scaling properties for audio and speech recognition; and I will also talk about how we can move towards unsupervised learning from real-world data in a way that (almost) matches curated data performance and allows highly-distributed learning from audio devices in the wild.

    Speaker Bio:
    Paris Smaragdis is a Professor and an Associate Department Head in the Computer Science department in the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He completer his graduate studies and postdoc at MIT in 2001. He has been a research scientist at Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs in Cambridge MA, a senior research scientist at Adobe Research, and an Amazon Scholar with AWS. His research lies in the intersection of signal processing and machine learning, where he has contributed multiple widely used methods for source separation and audio analysis throughout his 150+ publications and 60+ US and international patents. His research has been productized many times worldwide, has been widely used in personal computers and commercial systems, and has been used in award winning movies and music releases. He was recognized by the MIT Technology Review as one of the "world's top innovators under 35 years old" in 2006 (TR35 award) and he has received the IEEE Signal Processing Society (SPS) Best Paper Award twice (2017,2020). He was elected an IEEE Fellow (class of 2015), and selected as an IEEE SPS Distinguished Lecturer (2016-2017). Within IEEE SPS he has served as the chair the Machine Learning for Signal Processing Technical Committee, the Audio and Acoustic Signal Processing Technical Committee, and the Data Science Initiative. He has been elected to and served in the IEEE Signal Processing Society Board of Governors, and is currently the Editor in Chief of the ACM/IEEE Transactions on Audio, Speech, and Language Processing.

  • Speaker:

    Prof. Paris Smaragdis
    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

    Paris Smaragdis is a Professor and an Associate Department Head in the Computer Science department in the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He completer his graduate studies and postdoc at MIT in 2001. He has been a research scientist at Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs in Cambridge MA, a senior research scientist at Adobe Research, and an Amazon Scholar with AWS. His research lies in the intersection of signal processing and machine learning, where he has contributed multiple widely used methods for source separation and audio analysis throughout his 150+ publications and 60+ US and international patents. His research has been productized many times worldwide, has been widely used in personal computers and commercial systems, and has been used in award winning movies and music releases. He was recognized by the MIT Technology Review as one of the "world's top innovators under 35 years old" in 2006 (TR35 award) and he has received the IEEE Signal Processing Society (SPS) Best Paper Award twice (2017,2020). He was elected an IEEE Fellow (class of 2015), and selected as an IEEE SPS Distinguished Lecturer (2016-2017). Within IEEE SPS he has served as the chair the Machine Learning for Signal Processing Technical Committee, the Audio and Acoustic Signal Processing Technical Committee, and the Data Science Initiative. He has been elected to and served in the IEEE Signal Processing Society Board of Governors, and is currently the Editor in Chief of the ACM/IEEE Transactions on Audio, Speech, and Language Processing.

  • External Link:

    https://merl.com/events/voh22