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Lecture Series

Upcoming Events

The ISL web site is maintained by
Pamela L. White
. Most recent update 11/13/09.

Introduction

There has been a steady growth in the interactions between control theory and various branches of the physical and biological sciences. These interactions have been significantly influenced by the increasing role of the dynamical systems perspective in these sciences. This series of talks is designed to highlight some of the exciting developments now taking place at the forefront of research in Control and Dynamical Systems and to draw attention to some of the emerging interdisciplinary connections. Since its establishment in 1996, this series has included contributions by engineers, mathematicians, physicists, and biologists engaged at the forefront of research in control systems, computation, cell biology, robotics, networking, cooperative pheonomena and other areas.

This series has been supported in part by the Army Research Office under the ODDR&E MURI97 Program Grant No. DAAG55-97-1-0114 to the Center for Dynamics and Control of Smart Structures (through Harvard University), and the ODDR&E MURI01 Program Grant No. DAAD19-01-1-0465 to the Center for Communicating Networked Control Systems (through Boston University), and by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under AFOSR Grant No. F49620-01-0415.

The CDS lecture series is associated with the Intelligent Servosystems Laboratory and the Center for Dynamics and Control of Smart Structures. Please visit the listing of all previous CDS lectures.


Lecture Schedule

Please click on lecture title for an abstract.
Please click on speaker's name for a brief biography.

POSTPONED! NEW DATE TBA
Friday, November 20, 2009, 2:00p.m.
A.V. Williams Bldg, Room 2120
University of Maryland at College Park
Forces generated by actin polymerization: from lipid vesicles to immune cells
Arpita Upadhyaya
Department of Physics
IPST
University of Maryland at College Park

Wednesday, October 28, 2009, 5:00 p.m.
Computer Science Instructional Center (Building 406), Room 1115
University of Maryland at College Park
A reception will precede the lecture at 4:30 in the lobby of the CSIC Building
Quantum Information Science
Christopher Monroe

Bice Zorn Professor, Department of Physics
University of Maryland at College Park

Wednesday, October 21, 2009, 2:00 p.m.
A. V. Williams Building, Room 2460
Host: P. S. Krishnaprasad
Reception will follow lecture
UAV Motion Planning and Resource Management of Heterogeneous Platform and Sensor Ensembles
Andrew J. Newman

The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

Wednesday, October 14, 2009, 11:00 a.m.
A. V. Williams Building, Room 2168
Host: P. S. Krishnaprasad
Q-learning and Pontryagin's Minimum Principle
Sean Meyn

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Coordinated Science Lab
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign