COMPUTATIONAL RESEARCH in BOSTON and BEYOND (CRIBB)
Welcome! This is an archive page for a previous or upcoming year of the Computational Research in Boston and Beyond Seminar (CRiBB). To see current seminar information visit the Home Page.
To subscribe to a low-traffic mailing list for announcements related to the forum, please visit the CRiB-list web page.
For more information, e-mail Professor Alan Edelman (edelman AT math.mit.edu) and/or Professor Jeremy Kepner (kepner AT ll.mit.edu).
Organizers : 2023
Dr. Patrick Dreher | (MIT - Laboratory for Nuclear Science) |
Professor Alan Edelman | (MIT - Math & CSAIL) |
Dr. Chris Hill | (MIT - Earth and Atmospheric Science) |
Professor Steven G. Johnson | (MIT - Math & RLE) |
Dr. Jeremy Kepner | (MIT - Lincoln Laboratory) |
Dr. Albert Reuther | (MIT - Lincoln Laboratory) |
Meetings : 2023
Meetings will be held on the first Friday of the month at the MIT Campus in Room: 32-144 . The meetings will begin at 12:00pm, and pizza will be provided. Upcoming talks are listed below - some will be virtual via ZOOM:
https://mit.zoom.us/j/96155042770 | Meeting ID: 961 5504 2770
Jan 6 |
Jacob Merson (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute) Multiscale and multiphysics technologies for biomechanics and tokamaks |
Jan 13 |
No Seminar |
Feb 3 |
Joseph McDonald (MIT - Lincoln Lab) Enabling Energy-Efficient AI on HPC Systems |
Mar 3 |
Mohammad Shafaet Islam (MIT) Accelerating the Jacobi Iteration for Solving Linear Systems of Equations using Theory, Data and High Performance Computing |
Apr 7 |
Albert Reuther (MIT - Lincoln Lab) AI Hardware Accelerators Survey |
May 5 |
Dr. Johannes Feldmann (Co-Founder and CTO at Salience Labs, Oxford, UK.) Ultra-low latency energy saving computing with silicon photonics. |
Jun 2 |
Piotr Luszczek (University of Tennessee, Knoxville) Mixed-precision algorithms: from ML to HPC |
Sep 1 |
No Seminar
|
Oct 6 |
No Seminar
|
Nov 3 |
|
Dec 1 |
Drummond Fielding (Flatiron Institute) Bridging the Divide: A Multi-Scale Approach To Galaxy Formation |
Archives
Acknowledgements
We thank the generous support of MIT IS&T, CSAIL, and the Department of Mathematics for their support of this series.