Thought some of you might be interested in this.

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Anne E. Hilton
Sent: Tuesday, February 05, 2013 2:11 PM
To: '[email protected]'; '[email protected]'
Subject: [dub] Tomorrow: Guest Lecture by Hari Sundaram on Crowdsourcing Change

[Hari Sundaram]Please join the Department of Human Centered Design & 
Engineering (HCDE) for a guest lecture by Hari Sundaram, Associate Professor at 
Arizona State University.
Title: Crowdsourcing Change: The Role of Computing in Tackling Major Societal 
Problems
Speaker: Hari Sundaram, Associate Professor
When: 3:15 PM, Wednesday, February 6, 2013
Where: Electrical Engineering Building (EEB), Room 303, University of 
Washington, Seattle campus
Abstract:

Many of the pressing challenges facing contemporary society concern 
sustainability and public health. For example, how can sustainable 
behaviors-such as reducing individual energy consumption-be encouraged? How can 
participation in activities that reduce overall healthcare costs-such as 
compliance with preventive care routines and leading healthy lifestyles-be 
supported? Common to these challenges is a fundamental question: how can we 
facilitate cooperative behavior adoption on a large scale?

The conditions for self-governance found in small groups do not apply in large 
populations. As a result, the question of how cooperation can be facilitated in 
large populations remains unanswered and is the focus of my work. In this talk, 
I shall discuss the computational tools needed-analysis of social signals from 
networks and knowledge of human activity from physical sensors-to engender 
cooperation in heterogenous populations. I shall discuss in depth our work on 
discovering homogenous groups, and discuss in brief two data science 
challenges: network sampling, compressed sensing techniques to analyze large 
scale network changes. Central to our framework of cooperative behavior is the 
idea that individuals are resource constrained and these constraints affect how 
they participate in activities. I shall also present connections between 
information theory and networks: the social cooperative capacity of a group, 
and the design of signaling schemes for cooperation.

About the Speaker:

Hari Sundaram is an associate professor with the School of Arts Media and 
Engineering, as well with the School of Computing, Information and Decision 
Systems Engineering at Arizona State University. He received his PhD from the 
Department of Electrical Engineering at Columbia University in 2002. His 
research and teaching focus on using network analysis tools and sensors to 
understand and influence individual decision making. His research has won 
several best paper awards from the IEEE and the ACM. He also received the 
Eliahu I. Jury Award for best PhD dissertation in 2002 . He is an associate 
editor for ACM Transactions on Multimedia Computing, Communications and 
Applications and IEEE Multimedia.



For more information on Mr. Sundaram and his research, 
visithttp://ame2.asu.edu/faculty/hs

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