Why aren’t fleets of automated drones used?

From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Angel Edward
Sent: Monday, November 9, 2020 4:28 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Subject: [FRIAM] Fwd: [Colloquia] Colloquium - Wed Nov 11 - Kasra Manavi




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From: Shuang Luan <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: [Colloquia] Colloquium - Wed Nov 11 - Kasra Manavi
Date: November 9, 2020 at 10:10:31 AM MST
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>, 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>, 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>, CS Faculty mail list 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>

UNM Computer Science Department Colloquium Series
Wednesday, Nov 11, 2020
2:00-2:50 PM

Join via Zoom:
https://unm.zoom.us/j/98715707842
Meeting ID: 987 1570 7842
Passcode: 9620277

Speaker:
Kasra “Kaz” Manavi, PhD
Director of Research and Communications, Simtable

Title:
Realtime.Earth: Collective Intelligence from Distributed Imagery for Wildland 
Fire

Abstract:
We are currently fighting “blind” on wildland fire incidents. Fire location and 
behavior intelligence is crucial during the initial phase of an incident, but 
reports of wildfire can be delayed for hours. To make matters worse, changes in 
fuel loads and forest composition along with increasing fire season lengths are 
resulting in larger and more intense fires. With recent events like the Tubbs, 
Atlas and Camp Fires, more and more catastrophic wildland fire events are 
causing significant structure damage and considerable numbers of lives are 
being lost. Real-time data streams relevant to wildland fire are diversifying 
e.g. increased activity on social media and publicly accessible imagery. With 
the increase in these streams, more and more sources of relevant imagery are 
becoming available during an incident. We suggest the fusion of these data 
outlets coupled with streaming camera feeds directly from mobile phone browsers 
can provide real-time situation awareness during the critical first hours of an 
incident. In this talk we discuss observations obtained using Realtime.Earth, a 
web-based platform for real-time collective intelligence enabled by imagery 
capture and collection, data distribution and model visualization, all in the 
browser. We discuss how imagery captured on mobile devices from citizens, crews 
and social media can be fused together into live 3D models for real-time fire 
behavior monitoring.

Bio:
Kasra “Kaz” Manavi is the Director of Research and Communications at Simtable. 
He received a M.S. in Computer Science from Texas A&M University with an 
emphasis on robotic motion planning and received a PhD in Computer Science from 
the University of New Mexico with a focus on computational structural biology. 
After graduation, he started working at Simtable LLC in Santa Fe, NM, where he 
has been working on developing a web-based platform to enable real-time 
collective intelligence by providing users the ability to seamlessly 
incorporate agent-based modeling, ambient computing, photogrammetry, geospatial 
information systems and distributed computation into solutions that helps users 
better understand complex environmental and social phenomena in their 
community, primarily in the wildland fire space.


Shuang (Sean) Luan, PhD
Professor and Associate Chair, Computer Science
Director, Biomedical Engineering Graduate Program
University of New Mexico

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