The Human Media Lab was featured on the BBC, TechCrunch, Kingston Herald, Gadgetify, and other publications this week with their rollable tablet phone – MagicScroll. The device can be rolled like a Rolodex to select contacts and unfurled to get a better view or to type.
Marwa Afifi and Dr. Mohammad Zulkernine Receive Best Paper Award at ICSSA
Congratulations to Marwa Afifi and Dr. Mohammad Zulkernine. Their paper “Integrating Security in Cloud Application Development Cycle” received best paper award at the IEEE International Conference on Software Security and Assurance (ICSSA), Seoul, Korea, July 2018.
Well done.
Dr. Farhana Zulkernine Receives Funding for PTSD Research
Dr. Farhana Zulkernine (with Dr. Alex Singer from the University of Manitoba and Dr. Don Richardson from Western University) received funding from IBM Canada Ltd. (IBM) and Mitacs, through the Advanced Analytics Initiative, a research initiative launched in partnership with CIMVHR (Canadian Institute for Military and Veteran Health Research) and IBM. The research will develop text mining and machine learning techniques to identify the symptoms of PTSD and suicidal tendencies from patients’ data.
The project title is “Using Advanced Analytics to Understand PTSD in Family Practice and Specialty Cate.”
Congratulations!!
New Tier 2 Canada Research Chair Position in Biomedical Computing and Informatics Announced
The School of Computing, Faculty of Arts and Science and the Department of Biomedical and Molecular Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences at Queen’s University invite applications for a joint tenure-track faculty position as a Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Biomedical Computing and Informatics, with a preferred starting date of July 1, 2019. The appointment will be at the rank of Assistant or Associate Professor, depending upon the level of experience of the successful candidate. This position is subject to final budgetary approval by the University.
For more information, see: http://flux.cs.queensu.ca/employment/2018/06/05/school-of-computing-tier-2-canada-research-chair-in-biomedical-computing-and-informatics/
Tenth Annual School of Computing Awards
School Director Hossam Hassanein hosted the Tenth Annual Queen’s School of Computing Awards ceremony following today’s convocation ceremony. The awards were created to recognize excellence in various forms of endeavour, an opportunity to celebrate the contributions of those in the school who distinguished themselves through their exceptional work, and as an opportunity to say thank you to those who made a difference in School life.
This year’s recipients were:
- Howard Staveley Teaching Award in Recognition of Teaching Excellence: Randy Ellis
- Excellence in Teaching Assistance Award: Taylor Smith
- Outstanding Master’s Thesis Award: Hanyang Hu
- Ph.D. Research Achievement Award: Mojtaba Bagherzadeh and Shahrear Iqbal
- Student Distinguished Service Award: Emily Crawford and Hillary Lia
Also honoured this year were the Computing medal recipient Chung Yi Joey Sun, and the Agnes Benidickson Tricolour Award winner Max Garcia, both presented earlier at convocation.
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Photos by Doug Martin
Convocation 2018
Congratulations to the Computing Class of 2018 who graduated in this morning’s convocation ceremony in Grant Hall. We wish you the best of luck in your future endeavors!
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Photos by Doug Martin
Dr. James Cordy and QSC Alum Dr. Chanchal Roy Win Their Second Most Influential Paper This Year at ICPC 2018
Congratulations to Prof. James Cordy and School alumnus Prof. Chanchal Roy of the University of Saskatchewan on winning their *second* ten-year Most Influential Paper award of 2018, at ICPC 2018 this week in Gothenburg, Sweden.
ICPC 2018, the 26th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Program Comprehension, is the premier international venue for work in the area of computer program comprehension. It encompasses both human activities for comprehending the software and technologies for supporting such comprehension.
Their ICPC 2008 research paper, “NiCad: Accurate Detection of Near-Miss Intentional Clones Using Flexible Pretty-Printing and Code Normalization” was chosen from among all those published at ICPC 2008 for its lasting impact on research over the past decade. Among other things, the committee noted that “The impact of NiCad goes quite beyond the ICPC community. NiCad set a research program that continues to this day across several research groups.”
Most Influential Paper (MIP) awards are the hallmark of lasting research impact in software engineering. Earlier this year Profs. Roy and Cordy won another MIP award at SANER 2018, the 25th IEEE International Conference on Software Analysis, Evolution and Reengineering, the premier international conference on the theory and practice of recovering information from existing software and systems. One MIP is a distinction – two in one year is a truly exceptional achievement!
Aboriginal Youth Leadership Program Visits the Queen’s School of Computing
The School of Computing at Queen’s University hosted members of the Aboriginal Youth Leadership Program to a workshop of video game development and virtual storytelling, April 13 and April 26. The workshop formed part of the Storying Resilience partnership project co-organized by the Agnes Etherington Art Centre and Four Directions Aboriginal Student Centre. Youth were invited to learn about the creation of interactive computer programs, such as games. The participants explored the Scratch programming language, and used it to create fun, interactive experiences. The sessions were led by MSc student Paul Allison and Prof. Nicholas Graham.
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Photos by Garrett Elliott and Doug Martin
David Skillicorn talks to CBC Radio about Wasaga Beach’s hacking crisis
Dr. Skillicorn discusses the hack and the ransom paid to recover some of the data.
Source: CBC Radio
Gabor Fichtinger Named Canada Research Chair in Integrated Surgery
Congratulations to Gabor Fichtinger on being named Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Computer Integrated Surgery.
Every year, the Government of Canada invests approximately $265 million through the Canada Research Chairs (CRC) Program to attract and retain some of the world’s foremost academic talent. On May 3, 2018, four Queen’s researchers were appointed to Tier 1 and Tier 2 CRC roles – two of whom have been newly selected and two who were renewed for another term.
“The Canada Research Chairs Program continues to nurture exciting research being conducted at institutions across the country,” says John Fisher, Interim Vice-Principal (Research). “Here at Queen’s we are very proud to have not only two of our current Chairs renewed to their roles, but to also have two faculty members appointed as brand new chair holders. Their leadership within their respective academic disciplines represents the research excellence our university strives to achieve.”
Tier 1 Chairs are recognized by their peers as world leaders in their respective fields, while Tier 2 Chairs are recognized as emerging leaders in their research areas. Queen’s will receive $200,000 per year over seven years for each Tier 1 Chair and $100,000 per year over five years for each Tier 2 Chair. Currently, Queen’s is home to over 40 Canada Research Chairs.
Developed in 2000, the CRC program promotes research excellence in engineering, natural sciences, health sciences, humanities, and social sciences.