Thursday, April 25, 2013

When Engineering Meets Couture and Entertainment

Students from WIC @ UCSD, a women in computing organization here at the Jacobs School, got to meet a UC San Diego alumna doing unique work at the intersection of engineering and art April 14 at the init(together) conference at the University of California, Irvine.
Janet Hansen got her Ph.D. in applied mechanics and engineering science as well as bioengineering from UC San Diego. In 1998, she founded Enlighted Designs, Inc., a company that specializes in making custom lighted clothing, mostly for performers, including Britney Speaks, Katy Perry, Pink, Rihanna and Ke$ha. Hansen showed off some of her designs to the WIC students, who snapped pictures. See some examples below and click here for a more complete gallery of Hansen's wares on her company's website.






The WIC @ UCSD members ready to embark on their trip.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Research Expo 2013 Winners

And the winner of the top prize at Research Expo 2013...the Rudee Outstanding Poster Award ...(drum roll)

Poster #182: A BIOMIMETIC NANOSPONGE AGAINST PORE-FORMING TOXINS 
Student: Ronnie Hongbo Fang
Professor: Liangfang Zhang from the Department of NanoEngineering

Abstract
Many threats to public health, including bacterial infections and biological weaponry, often rely on pore-forming toxins for their virulence. Anti-virulence therapy, which targets these toxins, offers a way to detoxify the body and attenuate the effectiveness of the underlying threat. Existing platforms, including anti-sera, monoclonal antibodies, and molecularly imprinted polymers, have all been used effectively for this purpose, but they all require customized synthesis schemes for application against each individual type of toxin. We have developed a biomimetic toxin nanosponge targets the action mechanism of pore-forming toxins, and thus is applicable for the detoxification of a wide array of toxin types without the need for customized synthesis. The nanosponge is made by coating red blood cell membranes onto the surface of polymeric nanoparticle cores, and acts by absorbing membrane-damaging toxins and diverting them away from their intended targets. Using a murine model, it was demonstrated that these nanosponges are able to significantly increase the survival of mice challenged with a lethal dose of staphylococcal alpha-hemolysin (α-toxin). This rationally designed, bioinspired platform has the potential to be used as a treatment against a variety of diseases that employ pore-forming toxins.

Parts of this work were published last week in Nature Nanotechnology. Check out the Jacobs School press release on related work.





Best Posters by Department

Bioengineering Best Poster
#11 ISOLATIONOF DNA FROM BLOOD SAMPLES FOR CANCER DIAGNOSTICS
Avery R. Sonnenberg
(Professor: Michael Heller)


Computer Science best poster
#31 CODESPELLS:LEARNING TO PROGRAM THROUGH IMMERSIVE GAMEPLAY
Sarah Marie Esper
Stephen Foster
(Professors: William G. Griswold, Elizabeth A. Simon) 

Electrical and Computer Engineering Best Poster
#77 PASSIVEACOUSTIC TRACKING OF TOOTHED WHALES WITH VOLUMETRIC SMALL-APERTURE ARRAYS
Martin Gassmann
(Professors: John A. Hildebrand, William S. Hodgkiss, Gert Lanckriet )

Katie Osterday Best Poster
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Amanpreet Kaur
(Professor: Carlos F. Coimbra) 

NanoEngineering Best Poster
#182  
A BIOMIMETIC NANOSPONGE AGAINST PORE-FORMING TOXINS
Ronnie Hongbo Fang
(Professor: Liangfang Zhang)

Structural Engineering
#200 CEMENT SEA-WATER BATTERY (C-SWB) POWERED SENSOR NODE FOR MARINE INFRASTRUCTURE MONITORING
Scott Anthony Ouellette
(Professor: Michael D. Todd) 

*New for 2013*
von Liebig Entrepreneurism Center Innovation Awards


von Liebig Entrepreneurism Center
Innovation Award in Information Technology

#46 SOPRA – A PROACTIVE SERVICE ORIENTED SELF-ADAPTIVE FRAMEWORK FOR DATA CENTER RESOURCE OPTIMIZATION
Filippo Seracini
(Professor: Ingolf Krueger)

von Liebig Entrepreneurism Center
Innovation Award in Life Sciences
#183 ANTIMICROBIAL NANOTHERAPEUTICS FOR THE TREATMENT OF H. PYLORI INFECTION
Soracha Thamphiwatana
Victoria Fu
(Professor: Liangfang Zhang)

von Liebig Entrepreneurism Center
Innovation Award in Materials Mechanics or Energy
#118 ADVANCES IN INTRA-DAY SOLAR FORECASTING TECHNOLOGIES
Lukas Nonnenmacher
(Professor: Carlos F. Coimbra)


***
Best Poster Awards: Honorable Mentions by Department

Bioengineering Honorable Mention Posters

#17 REGULATION OF MITOCHONDRIAL METABOLISM BY THE LKB1 TUMOR SUPPRESSOR Student: Seth Jameson Parker
Professor: Christian M. Metallo

#21 QUANTITATIVE TRANSCRIPTOMICS USING DESIGNED PRIMER-BASED AMPLIFICATION
Student: Vipul Bhargava
Professor: Shankar Subramaniam

Computer Science and Engineering Honorable Mention Posters

#28 RECOGNIZING SIGHTS, SMELLS, AND SOUNDS WITH GNOSTIC FIELDS
Student: Christopher Kanan
Professor: Garrison W. Cottrell

#50 HOMESIM: COMPREHENSIVE, SMART, RESIDENTIAL ENERGY SIMULATION AND SCHEDULING
Students: Jagannathan Venkatesh, Alper Akyurek
Professor: Tajana S. Rosing

#51 TEMPERATURE AWARE THREAD BLOCK SCHEDULING FOR GPGPUS
Student: Rajib Kumar Nath
Professor: Tajana S. Rosing


Electrical and Computer Engineering Honorable Mention Posters

#60 HIGH ENERGY DENSITY, HIGH OPERATING FREQUENCY AND ENERGY EFFICIENT ON-CHIP INDUCTORS BASED ON COILED CARBON NANOTUBES (CCNTS)
Student: Hasan Mohammad Faraby
Professor: Prabhakar R. Bandaru

#70 NANOSCALE PLASMONIC DEVICES FOR BIOSENSING APPLICATIONS
Students: Lindsay Michelle Freeman, Lin Pang, Brandon Hong, Alexei Smolyaninov
Professor: Y.
Shaya Fainman

#74 WIDE-FIELD OF VIEW FIBER-COUPLED MONOCENTRIC IMAGERS
Student: Igor Stamenov
Professor: Joseph E. Ford

#82 POST-ROUTING LAYOUT OPTIMIZATIONS FOR IMPROVED TIME-DEPENDENT DIELECTRIC BREAKDOWN RELIABILITY IN SUB-20NM ICS
Student: Tuck Boon Chan
Professor: Andrew B. Kahng

#86 NANOPATTERNED MULTILAYER HYPERBOLIC METAMATERIALS FOR SPONTANEOUS LIGHT EMISSION CONTROL
Students: Danyong Lu, Lorenzo Ferrari, Jimmy Kan
Professors: Zhaowei Liu, Eric Fullerton

#97 ASSISTING THE DRIVER DURING CHALLENGING MANEUVERS USING PROBABILISTIC MODELING AND INTEGRATED SENSING
Student: Sayanan Vinoth Sivaraman
Professor: Mohan M. Trivedi

#100 MONITORING HEAD DYNAMICS FOR DRIVER ASSISTANCE SYSTEMS: A MULTI-PERSPECTIVE APPROACH
Student: Sujitha Catherine Martin
Professor: Mohan M. Trivedi

#102 GROWTH WINDOW AND OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF GAP/GANP CORE/SHELL NANOWIRE ARRAYS
Student: Supanee Sukrittanon
Professor: Charles W. Tu

Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Honorable Mention Posters

#111 FAST ELECTRON TRANSPORT AND SPATIAL ENERGY DEPOSITION INTO IMPLODED HIGH DENSITY PLASMAS USING CU-DOPED CD SHELL TARGETS
Student: Leonard C. Jarrott
Professor: Farhat N. Beg

#114 STUDY OF PRE-PLASMA EFFECTS ON FAST ELECTRON GENERATION AND TRANSPORT USING THE 1.5 KJ, 10 PS OMEGA EP LASER WITH BREMSSTRAHLUNG SPECTROMETERS
Student: Jonathan Lee Peebles
Professor: Farhat N. Beg

#123 TEAM-TRIGGERED COORDINATION OF ROBOTIC NETWORKS
Student: Cameron Nowzari
Professor: Jorge Cortes

#128 MECHANO-CHEMICAL MODEL OF CANCER CELL INVASION
Student: Jui-Hsien Wang
Professor: Juan Carlos Del Alamo

#129 PARTICLE TRACKING MICRORHEOLOGY OF VISCOUS NEMATIC GELS
Student: Manuel Gomez-Gonzalez
Professor: Juan Carlos Del Alamo

#130 LAGRANGIAN COHERENT STRUCTURES IN TURBULENT SEPARATED FLOW
Student: Daniel A. Nelson
 Professors: Gustaaf Jacobs, Sutanu Sarkar

#131 SKY IMAGER SOLAR FORECASTING FOR MICROGRID OPTIMIZATION
Students: Benjamin Bernard Kurtz, Bryan Urquhart, Chi Wai Chow, Anders Nottrot, Mohamed Ghonima, Andu Nguyen, Handa Yang, Oytun Babacan
Professor: Jan P. Kleissl

#138 MAGNETIC FREEZE CASTING INSPIRED BY NATURE
Student: Michael Martin Porter
Professors: Joanna M. McKittrick, Marc A. Meyers

NanoEngineering Honorable Mention Posters

#161 BIOCOMPATIBLE COATING FOR IMPROVED IN VIVO PERSISTENCE OF ADENOVIRUSES Student: Gen Yong
Professor: Sadik C. Esener

#174 DESIGN OF A SOLAR THERMOCHEMICAL HYDROGEN PRODUCTION PLANT
Student: Wesley Wai Luc
Professors: Jan B. Talbot, Richard K. Herz

Structural Engineering Honorable Mention Posters

#194 SHAKE TABLE TESTING OF A FULL-SCALE FIVE-STORY BUILDING: SEISMIC PERFORMANCE OF PRECAST CONCRETE CLADDING PANELS
Student: Elide Pantoli
Professor: Tara C. Hutchinson

#201 IMPROVED SENSITIVITY OF CONDITION MONITORING FEATURES VIA HOLDER EXPONENT ANALYSIS
Student: Luke Thomas Robinson
Professors: Michael D. Todd, Charles R. Farrar

S&E Library Best Literature Review Awards


#183 ANTIMICROBIAL NANOTHERAPEUTICS FOR THE TREATMENT OF H. PYLORI INFECTION
Students: Soracha Thamphiwatana, Victoria Fu
Professor: Liangfang Zhang

#195 SHAKE TABLE TESTING OF STIFF MODEL STATUE STRUCTURES CONSIDERING MASS ECCENTRICITY
Student: Christine Wittich
Professor: Tara C. Hutchinson

Students disect hard drives, learn about design


From left: Lauren Cwiklo, another student and Nate Delson, a lecturer in the MAE department, look at a hard drive.

What's in a hard drive? A lot of lessons in good design, it turns out. That's what Nate Delson, a lecturer in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, wanted to teach a group of students who turned out for a "hard-drive dissection" session in the Design Studio at EBU II Thursday, April 18.

"Hard drives are fascinating," Delson said. 

They're probably the most precise devices anyone has in their homes, Delson added. "There's a lot of very precise design and machining that goes into a hard drive," he said. He added he hoped taking apart the hard drives would teach students about good design practices.

Mechanical engineering students weren't the only ones to turn out for the session. Students in environmental engineering, engineering science, cognitive science and bioengineering turned out too. "It's really interesting to see how stuff works," said Priya Bisarya, a bioengineering major. The exercise took her back to a childhood memory, when she and her father took apart the family's VCR.

Chris Cassidy from the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering provided power supplies and use of the Design Studio for the session. Earl "Bucky" Reed, from the Office of Engineering Computer, provided the hard drives. The session's student coordinators were Ngoc "Naomi" Diep and Jake Malone.
From left: Kelly Mark, Miranda Bohm and Brian Kim examine a hard drive.
Masato Koizumi uses a screwdriver to open a hard drive.
Elioth Fraijo opens a hard drive.

From left: Tanima Shukla, Priya Bisarya and Fabian Ramirez examine hard drive components.

Pauline Laikijrung poses with a hard drive component.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Nanosponge Video

Below is the nanosponge video that we worked on, to go with the press release.

Nanosponges Soak Up Toxins Released by Bacterial Infections and Venom

This particular project is one of what is likely an ongoing series of projects that highlight the exciting ways that red blood cell membranes can functionalize nanoparticles.

This work follows up on the 2011 research by the same team of nanoengineers. That work was published in PNAS.

At Research Expo this Thursday, two different aspects of this work will be presented at the graduate student poster session. On-site registration for Research Expo is the way to go b/c online registration closed yesterday.

182. A BIOMIMETIC NANOSPONGE AGAINST PORE-FORMING TOXINS

Student(s): Ronnie Hongbo Fang
Professor(s)Liangfang Zhang
Industry Application Area(s): Life Sciences/Medical Devices & Instruments | Materials

184. ERYTHROCYTE MEMBRANE-CLOAKED NANOPARTICLES AS A BIOMIMETIC DELIVERY PLATFORM

Student(s): Brian Tsengchi Luk
Professor(s)Liangfang Zhang
Industry Application Area(s): Materials | Bioengineering | Nanomedicine


 

Friday, April 12, 2013

CodeSpells Creator Sarah Esper is Presenting at Research Expo on April 18



Computer Science PhD student Sarah Esper is one of the creators of CodeSpells, a videogame that teaches kids Java. CodeSpells has gotten a lot of attention recently (press release, CodeSpells blog) . Here's a sample of some of the media coverage it's received so far:

Wired: Experimental Videogame Teaches Kids How to Program in Java

Gizmag: Video game teaches Java programming language to players

Examiner.com: A new game lets you save the world and learn Java at the same time

Esper is one of the 200+ grad students presenting their research projects at Research Expo on April 18, here at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering.

Register for Research Expo here.
UC San Diego alumni receive half-price admission.
Employees of CAP member companies receive 2-for-1 admission.

The poster title and abstract are below:



31. CODESPELLS: LEARNING TO PROGRAM THROUGH IMMERSIVE GAMEPLAY

Primary Student
Name: Sarah Esper
Student CollaboratorsStephen Foster
Abstract
CodeSpells is a 3D immersive video game designed to teach CS1 level programming concepts to novice students. It is meant to be a stand alone system that guides students through CS1 concepts in a explorative way, encouraging students to engage in pre-defined ?quests? that address particular concepts, but also informally through exploring the 3D world. There have been results to indicate that CodeSpells is a system that is engaging for students ages 9-24 who are complete novice programmers, interested in programming. Early results indicate that little external help is necessary for the students to complete the pre-defined challenges. This study aims to determine what kind of help is necessary as well as how much learning occurs in normal game play.
Related Links:
  1. http://www.jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/news_releases/release.sfe?id=1347
  2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TslR9CG6yKI

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Audacious Speculations



The Audacious Speculations event at UC San Diego will consist of a series of short, performative presentations on research that is so ambitious people often roll their eyes in disbelief, including activist projects that transform the socio-political landscape, or scientific research and experiments that are particularly poetic or speculative, and more. 

Documenting both existing and speculative work, the presenters include engineers who think like artists; scientists who think like poets; physicists who think like dancers; and artists who think like scientists, hypnotists – even like foxes. 

The evening will include presentations on movies for monkeys; a gestural language of physics; tracking trash in Tijuana; hypnosis; butterflies without borders; beautiful brains; biomimicry; smart underwear; finding your bliss; new silhouettes; and a fashionable approach to science education. 

Click on PRESENTATIONS for program details.

There will also be a live webcast and video archive...so if you stumble upon this post after the April 12 event, you can still enjoy it.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Want to Connect with the Future? Attend Research Expo at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering

Advances in tattoo sensors for health monitoring, on-chip optical networking, low-cost cancer diagnostics, video games designed to teach computer programming, new materials for protecting soldiers from blasts, and energy-efficient high-wire robots. These are just a few of the 200+ projects from Jacobs School of Engineering graduate students that will be on display at Research Expo on April 18 at the University of California, San Diego.


“Research Expo is a great opportunity to get an inside look at the world-class research happening at the Jacobs School of Engineering, which is fueled by $164 million in research funding,” said Juan C. Lasheras, Interim Dean of the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering. “At the poster session, you also get the chance to meet more than 200 of the graduate students who are engaged in this cutting-edge research.”
Research Expo is April 18th from 2:00‒6:00 p.m. at the Price Center at UC San Diego.

Tattoo sensors for health monitoring, from the lab of NanoEngineering professor Joseph Wang.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Allergen Detection Device

(L-R) Alexander Corelli, Kevin Huynh, Jaime Meriwether, and Roger Huang 

Kevin Huynh, Electrical Engineering graduate student and team lead. (Kevin also earned his undergrad degree here at the Jacobs School.)

Jaime Meriwether, NanoEngineering undergraduate and a team lead.


A few shots from the "Allergen Detection Device" team at the design competition of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, on Warren Mall today. This was part of the campus wide Triton Day at UC San Diego.

The team showed off their allergen detection device prototype...which is just one of the many possible applications of the technology they are developing: an automated ELISA assay and detection device.

You hear the word "interdisciplinary research" thrown around all the time, but the students highlighted how this project was the real interdisciplinary deal.

Team Leads:
Kevin Huynh (Electrical Engineering)
Jaime Meriwether (NanoEngineering)

Team Members:
Alexander Corelli (Electrical Engineering)
Roger Huang (Electrical Engineering)
Aung Myo (Rady School of Management)

I had to leave the event before the winning design team was announced...stay tuned to find out which ECE team won.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

BRAIN Initiative and UC San Diego

"Mapping the brain is wave of the future."

That's the headline to Gary Robbins' story in the San Diego Union Tribune describing President Barack Obama's announcement of BRAIN (Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies) Initiative. UC San Diego and others on "the Mesa" including the Salk Institute for Biological Sciences are going to be deeply involved in this project. 

Mike Freeman had a related story in the UT: "Qualcomm joins Obama's BRAIN project"

The UC San Diego story on the BRAIN Initiative  will break tomorrow ran in our weekly This Week @ UC San Diego digital news magazine. We'll add that link as soon as we have it.

Check out brain-related research at Research Expo on April 18 here at the Jacobs School. A number of the posters from Bioengineering are tied to the brain. But dig into the 200+ posters. I'm sure you'll find more connections. 

Here is a story and video from the White House: "BRAIN Initiative Challenges Researchers to Unlock Mysteries of Human Mind"





Alumni Event Sat April 6: Bench to Innovation


Find out what it takes to start your own company!

Have you ever wondered how lab technologies and techniques become the next hot commercial product or service? Is there a technology that you want to license, or see as a future possibility? Are you interested in how start-up companies are formed? Are you aware of your legal rights and responsibilities throughout the tech-transfer process?  Answers to these questions, as well as many others, will be addressed by a panel of UC San Diego alumni innovators involved in different phases of the tech-transfer process—from “the bench” to leading a successful industry startup!

Engage with talented entrepreneurs focused on supporting the professional and career development needs of our community—especially those of graduate students and postdocs. This session will feature a panel of talented alumni entrepreneurs, including:

•             Albert Lin, B.S. ’04, M.S. ’06, Ph.D. ’08
•             Raj Krishnan, Ph.D. ’06
•             John Yamauchi, B.S. ‘03, Ph.D. ’12

Moderated by Ms. Gioia Messinger, B.S., M.A. Electrical Engineering; MBA, UCI 

For detailed bios and to register (required), please visit: http://tinyurl.com/csxhl9x or http://www.scholarssocietyucsd.com/spring-symposium.html
A free, open event, but space is limited. 

Saturday, April 6
4:00 – 5:30pm
Price Center, Theater | UCSD


Sponsored by UCSD Alumni, as part of Triton Day 2013