Categories
-Top News Asia News India News

Indian-American wins Japan’s Okawa Prize

Nayar’s work has changed the way visual information is captured and used by both machines and humans….reports Asian Lite News

An Indian-origin Columbia University professor has been awarded Japan’s prestigious Okawa Prize for his seminal work on computer vision and computational imaging.

Shree K. Nayar, the T.C. Chang Professor of Computer Science at Columbia Engineering, is being recognized for “the invention of innovative imaging techniques and their widespread use in digital photography and computer vision”.

“I am grateful to the Okawa Foundation for this honor,” said Nayar, who directs Columbia’s Computational Imaging and Vision Laboratory.

“Over the last three decades, I have had many close and productive collaborations with Japanese researchers and companies. These have enabled my laboratory to translate our results into imaging technologies that are currently being used in consumer devices and factory automation systems, Nayar said in a statement.

Hailing from Thiruvananthapuram, Nayar heads the Columbia Vision Laboratory (CAVE), which develops advanced computer vision systems.

His work is motivated by applications in the fields of digital imaging, computer vision, computer graphics, robotics, and human-computer interfaces.

Nayar’s work has changed the way visual information is captured and used by both machines and humans.

In the mid-1990s, he pioneered the field of computational imaging, which combines unconventional optics with advanced image processing algorithms to produce immersive and interactive visual information, a Columbia University statement read.

Nayar’s idea of creating assorted pixels for high-dynamic-range (HDR) imaging has enabled smartphone cameras to leapfrog in terms of the quality of the photos they capture, the University said.

It is estimated that more than one billion smartphone users worldwide are using his technology on a daily basis.

Nayar received a BS degree in Electrical Engineering from Birla Institute of Technology, Jharkhand.

He has an MS degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering from North Carolina State University, and a PhD degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the Robotics Institute at Carnegie Mellon University.

For his research and teaching, Nayar has received several honors, including the David Marr Prize (1990 and 1995), the David and Lucile Packard Fellowship (1992), the National Young Investigator Award (1993), the Carnegie Mellon Alumni Achievement Award (2009), the Helmholtz Prize (2019), and the IEEE PAMI Distinguished Researcher Award (2019).

For his contributions to computer vision and computational imaging, he was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 2008, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2011, and the National Academy of Inventors in 2014.

Nayar will receive the prize at a ceremony to be held in Tokyo, Japan, in March 2023.

Since 1996, the prize, which honors outstanding contributions made to research, technological development, and business in the information and telecommunications fields, is given each year to one Japanese and one international researcher.

Before Nayar, two other Indian-origin scientists — Dr Raj Reddy (2004) and Dr J.K. Aggarwal — have won the award.

ALSO READ: Indian-American Attorney appointed 1st non-white treasurer of Missouri

Categories
-Top News India News USA

 Indian-American women launch digital platform ‘We Must Meet’

We Must Meet’ content will comprise international as well as regional projects. It will be driven by an annual subscription model and is being launched in India and globally….reports Asian Lite News

Former US President Donald Trump’s 2020 re-election campaign advisor Kimberly Guilfoyle has announced her association with a new digital platform ‘We Must Meet’, launched by a group of women of Indian heritage.

The technology initiative is said to be the first video conference platform that can also act as an OTT platform, where filmmakers from Hollywood and Indian Cinema can screen their own cinematic content.

Guilfoyle will be the brand ambassador and strategic advisor to the project as well as a stakeholder in the project, said founder Manju Mason.

Donald Trump Jr.’s fiancee Guilfoyle has joined forces with a group of women entrepreneur friends who are of Indian heritage. Founder Pooja A Patil says that the unique aspect of their latest offering ‘We Must Meet’ is that it can live stream political events, Town Halls, sports events and concerts, which can be accessed by up to 30,000 people at the same time.

Sharing her excitement, 21-year-old founder Founder Ish Patil, said, “Today the majority of top Bollywood and Hollywood film-makers are making content for OTT, exclusively for online screening. India’s OTT market is fastest-growing, and has the potential to become largest in the world.”

Founder Manju Mason also stated: “This is the only video conferencing platform that transcends the border of regular video conference towards screening of Bollywood and Hollywood online movies.”

‘We Must Meet’ content will comprise international as well as regional projects. It will be driven by an annual subscription model and is being launched in India and globally.

Elaborating on the platform, Manju Mason, who has conceptualized ‘We Must Meet’, added, “The software has been entirely developed in the United States and is community-based. It will change the way people will meet and host business meetings.”

‘We Must Meet’ is powered and managed by technology company Iotum, said tech coordinator R. Manji.

‘We Must Meet’ will connect students and learners to their curriculum and training from anywhere in the world via browser-based remote learning, said Pooja A Patil an educationist, who also overseas at numerous education institutions under the brand of Ajeenkya D.Y Patil University.

The company’s financial analyst K. Patel announced that ‘We Must Meet’ is soon going to launch Theme Parks, Boutique Hotels, resorts and restaurants under the same brand. (ANI)

ALSO READ: Indian American to lead $1.1 bn Stanford school on climate change

Categories
-Top News India News USA

Indian American named Biden’s Covid coordinator

Jha, who is the dean of the Brown University School of Public Health, is one of the most popular experts that the media reaches out to for explaining the Covid pandemic and the efforts to control it….writes Arul Louis

A Bihar-born global health expert has been appointed by US President Joe Biden to the White House position of overseeing the nation’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic.

“I am excited to name Dr Ashish Jha as the new White House Covid-19 Response Coordinator”, Biden said on Thursday announcing the appointment.

“Dr Jha is one of the leading public health experts in America, and a well-known figure to many Americans from his wise and calming public presence.”

Jha, who is the dean of the Brown University School of Public Health, is one of the most popular experts that the media reaches out to for explaining the Covid pandemic and the efforts to control it.

“For all the progress we’ve made in this pandemic (and there is a lot). We still have important work to do to protect Americans’ lives and well being. So when @POTUS asked me to serve, I was honoured to have the opportunity,” Jha said in a tweet.

He will be joining Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, National Drug Control Policy Director Rahul Gupta, and Center for Medicare Director Meena Seshamani at the higher echelons of US health care system.

Jha succeeds Jeff Zients, who is leaving the White House after 14 months during which two variants, Delta and Omicron, fuelled a surge in Covid cases that the US struggled to contain.

Zients leaves office with 65 per cent of Americans having received at least one dose of a Covid vaccine and nearly 77 per cent have been fully vaccinated with the seven-day average of infections plummeting from 806,851 in mid-January to 30,570 in mid-March.

Jha was born in Pursaulia in Bihar in 1970 to parents who were educators.

The family moved to Canada in 1979 and to the US in 1983.

He did his BA in economics at Columbia University and switching to medicine, he got his MD and master’s in public health from Harvard University.

He came to Brown from Harvard, where he was the director of the Harvard Global Health Institute and the dean for Global Strategy at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

He had also served as the co-chair of the Independent Panel on the Global Response to Ebola, which examined the failure of the international community’s response to the disease.

Even while he was heading the Brown University’s School of Public Health, he continued to practice medicine at a hospital for ex-military members.

During the Covid pandemic, he made frequent appearances on TV, wrote op-eds for leading newspapers and was often quoted by reporters.

The medical news website, STAT, called him “network TV’s everyman expert on Covid” with the qualities of a “telegenic phenom” and a “great communicator”.

Zients was a businessman and a bureaucrat, unlike Jha who is a doctor.

He is a former CEO of an investment company and a member of Facebook’s board of directors.

Before that, he had served as a special assistant to former President Barack Obama and as the director of the National Economic Council.

The changeover to a doctor marks an inflexion point in the pandemic where the logistics of mass vaccination and testing are in place and the future task is to monitor and prepare for new variations or other developments.

ALSO READ: In a first, a black woman becomes White House budget chief