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UID:34258-1669629600-1669633200@coe.northeastern.edu
SUMMARY:Can Qin's PhD Proposal Review
DESCRIPTION:“Transfer Learning across Domains\, Tasks and Models” \nAbstract: \nThe big data stands as a cornerstone of deep learning\, which has significantly improved a wide range of machine learning and computer vision tasks. Despite such a great success\, data collection is time-consuming and costly\, considering manual efforts and privacy restrictions. Transfer learning is a promising direction toward data-efficient AI by leveraging acquired data and pre-trained models as guidance. This dissertation focus on the feature and model transfer across different domains and tasks\, which can be roughly summarized into three sections. (1) Section One focuses on Unsupervised Domain Adaptation (UDA) without any labels in the target domain. The technical challenge of UDA is the distribution mismatch across domains. I have presented a hierarchical alignment model as the solution. (2) Section Two extends UDA into semi-supervised domain adaptation (SSDA) with minimal target-domain labels\, which is useful and effortless to acquire. To avoid overfitting toward labeled data\, I have proposed structural regularization verified on different classification benchmarks. (3) Section Three mainly explores the model transfer\, including teacher-student knowledge distillation and heterogeneous models infusion with a high potential for model compression and enhancement. \nCommittee: \nProf. Raymond Fu (Advisor) \nProf. Octavia Camps \nProf. Huaizu Jiang
URL:https://coe.northeastern.edu/event/can-qins-phd-proposal-review/
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221128T120000
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DTSTAMP:20260530T185044
CREATED:20221121T162045Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221121T162045Z
UID:34492-1669636800-1669644000@coe.northeastern.edu
SUMMARY:Xuanyi Zhao's PhD Proposal Review
DESCRIPTION:“AlN/AlScN based Micro Acoustic Metamaterials for Radio Frequency Applications of the Next Generations” \nAbstract: \nIn the last two decades‚ micro-acoustic resonators (μARs) have played a key role in integrated 1G-to-4G radios‚ providing the technological means to achieve compact radio frequency (RF) filters with low loss and moderate fractional bandwidths (BW<4%). More specifically‚ Aluminum Nitride (AlN) based filters have populated the front-end of most commercial mobile transceivers due to the good dielectric‚ piezoelectric and thermal properties exhibited by AlN thin-films and because their fabrication process is compatible with the one used for any Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuits (ICs). Nevertheless‚ the rapid growth of 5G and the abrupt technological leap expected with the development of sixth-generation (6G) communication systems are expected to severely complicate the design of future radio front-ends by demanding Super-High-Frequency (SHF) filtering components with much larger fractional bandwidths than achievable today. In the meantime\, as more acoustic filters replying on bulk waves which requests the devices to be physically-suspended to operate\, thermal related nonlinearity has been a challenge which requests new designs to enhance the thermal linearity thus power handling for these acoustic components. Even more‚ the recent invention of on-chip nonreciprocal components‚ like the circulators and isolators recently built in slightly different CMOS technologies‚ has provided concrete means to double the spectral efficiency of current radios by enabling the adoption of full-duplex communication schemes. Nevertheless‚ for such schemes to be really usable in wireless systems‚ self-interference cancellation networks including wideband‚ low-loss and large group delay lines are needed. Yet‚ the current on-chip delay lines that are also manufacturable through CMOS processes‚ which rely on the piezoelectric excitation of Surface Acoustic Waves (SAWs) or Lamb Waves in piezoelectric thin films‚ have their bandwidth and insertion-loss severely limited by the relatively low electromechanical coupling coefficient exhibited by their input and output transducers. As a results‚ these components are hardly usable to form any desired self-interference cancelation networks. In order to overcome these challenges‚ only recently‚ new classes of microacoustic resonators and delay lines exploiting the high piezoelectric coefficient of Aluminum Scandium Nitride (AlScN) thin films and the exotic dispersive features of acoustic metamaterials (AMs) have been emerging. These devices rely on forests of locally resonant piezoelectric rods to generate unique modal distributions‚ as well as unconventional wave propagation features that cannot be found in conventional SAW and Lamb wave counterparts. In this presentation‚ the design‚ fabrication and performance of the first microacoustic metamaterials (μAMs) based resonators and delay lines will be showcased. Moreover\, AMs based reflectors are invented and demonstrated providing new improving the linearity and power handling of the AlScN μARs. In addition to reviewing the current status of our work\, we will propose several further explorations of using our AlN/AlScN based AMs in RF applications of the next generations. \nCommittee: \nProf. Cristian Cassella (advisor) \nProf. Matteo Rinaldi \nDr. Jeronimo Segovia-Fernandez
URL:https://coe.northeastern.edu/event/xuanyi-zhaos-phd-proposal-review/
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