Horizon: A Sensory World. Novel Sensor Technologies and Applications
From self-parking cars to diagnostic tools for cancer, sensor technology is shaping our future. Indeed, some claim that sensors will change our world in this decade in the way microprocessors did in the 1980s and the Internet in the 1990s.
The Horizon seminar will showcase a broad selection of sensor technology and systems that have been developed at Cambridge. The Seminar will cover a wide range of sensor perspectives from the basic technology and science of sensor design, applications for diverse situations and environmental conditions, and the challenges associated with rendering meaning from sensor networks or multiple heterogeneous sensing assets. Examples of cross-over and cutting-edge applications will be discussed by both academic researchers and industry speakers.
The 1-day seminar series will take place at The Kaetsu Centre, New Hall and will provide delegates with a rich diversity of insights, perspectives and experiences
Contact: Liam Garvey ; Jo Ryan
0 upcoming talks View 14 archived talks
Olympic sensor systems
Mobile phones as sensors
Mobile Sensing - technologies, applications, and services
Pervasive messaging and location-aware applications
Flexible middleware for road traffic sensor data
Sensor signal inference: evasive targets, particles and point processes
Atmospheric sensing using ultra-sensitive spectroscopy
Smart infrastructure
Laser based reactive flow sensing
Bubbles and bangs: sensing volcanic emissions
MEMS for precision sensing
CMOS gas sensors
Contact lens diabetes management: A vision for the future
Realising the potential of sensing
Please see above for contact details for this list.
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Dr Robert Harle, Computer Laboratory.
Tuesday 20 March 2007, 17:00-17:30