Careers in Technology Spring Series 2025 - Rui Li, PhD - 11 February 8pm EST / 7 pm CST

#humanitarian #sight #history #networking #communications #CareersInTechSpringSeries
Share

Dr Rui Li of will take a deep dive into the Multimodal Interaction and Affective Computing Lab (MIAC Lab) at Montclair State with a focus on Multimodal Human-Machine Interaction. This exciting work involves multimodal information processing, immersive interaction, intelligent systems for vehicles and robots. Her passion is for the interdisciplinary study of human emotion, behavior, and cognition to bring about excellent human-machine interaction and intelligent machines.



  Date and Time

  Location

  Hosts

  Registration



  • Date: 11 Feb 2025
  • Time: 08:00 PM to 09:00 PM
  • All times are (UTC-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)
  • Add_To_Calendar_icon Add Event to Calendar
If you are not a robot, please complete the ReCAPTCHA to display virtual attendance info.
  • Contact Event Hosts
  •  

     

  • Starts 27 December 2024 12:00 AM
  • Ends 11 February 2025 12:00 AM
  • All times are (UTC-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)
  • No Admission Charge


  Speakers

Dr. Rui Li PhD

Topic:

Careers in Technology Spring Series 2025 - Rui Li, PhD

Dr Rui Li of will take a deep dive into the Multimodal Interaction and Affective Computing Lab (MIAC Lab) at Montclair State with a focus on Multimodal Human-Machine Interaction. This exciting work involves multimodal information processing, immersive interaction, intelligent systems for vehicles and robots. Her passion is for the interdisciplinary study of human emotion, behavior, and cognition to bring about excellent human-machine interaction and intelligent machines.

Biography:

Dr. Rui Li is an assistant professor in the School of Computing. She is the director of the Multimodal Interaction and Affective Computing Lab (MIAC Lab). Dr. Li's research focuses on Multimodal Human-Machine Interaction, encompassing multimodal information processing for immersive interaction, intelligent interactive systems for vehicles and robots, and affective computing for friendly human-machine interaction. Her research is currently funded by the National Science Foundation. Dr. Li is particularly interested in the interdisciplinary study of human emotion, behavior, and cognition. She actively integrates them into her research on multimodal human-machine interaction and intelligent machines. Dr. Li is a member of IEEE, and the vice-chair for the Women in Engineering (WIE) of the IEEE North Jersey Section.