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Rental Partner: University of Washington Office of Public Lectures presents

Priya Donti

Why AI Matters for the Climate (In More Ways Than One)

This event has already occurred
Date:
Monday, October 28
Time:
6:30 pm PDT
Cost:
$0-50 with suggested price of $5

Venue

The Wyncote NW Forum
1119 8th Ave (Entrance off Seneca St.)
Seattle, 98101 United States
+ Google Map

Organizer

University of Washington Office of Public Lectures

Phone
(206) 543-5900
Email
lectures@uw.edu
View Organizer Website

Note: A livestream of this event will also be available.

Presented by the University of Washington Office of Public Lectures. For questions about this event, please contact lectures@uw.edu.

Headshot of Priya Donti (with brown skin and chin length black hair)
Rentals

In this talk, Dr. Priya Donti, Assistant Professor and the Silverman (1968) Family Career Development Professor at MIT EECS and LIDS will explore AI’s multi-faceted relationship with climate change. This discussion will cover how researchers, practitioners, and policymakers can work together to better align the use of AI with climate change.

Read More

Dr. Priya Donti is an Assistant Professor and the Silverman (1968) Family Career Development Professor at MIT EECS and LIDS. Her research focuses on machine learning for forecasting, optimization, and control in high-renewable power grids. Methodologically, this entails exploring ways to incorporate relevant physics, hard constraints, and decision-making procedures into deep learning workflows. Priya is also the co-founder and Chair of Climate Change AI, a global nonprofit initiative to catalyze impactful work at the intersection of climate change and machine learning. Priya received her Ph.D. in Computer Science and Public Policy from Carnegie Mellon University, and is a recipient of the MIT Technology Review’s 2021 “35 Innovators Under 35” award, the AI2050 Early Career Fellowship, the ACM SIGEnergy Doctoral Dissertation Award, the Siebel Scholarship, the U.S. Department of Energy Computational Science Graduate Fellowship, and best paper awards at ICML (honorable mention), ACM e-Energy (runner-up), PECI, the Duke Energy Data Analytics Symposium, and the NeurIPS workshop on AI for Social Good.

Graduate School Public Lectures are brought to the community through three very generous private endowments:

Walker-Ames Fund

Jessie and John Danz Fund

Mary Ann and John D. Mangels Fund

Learn more about the University of Washington Office of Public Lectures Series here.

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