This talk will introduce the common multimodal learning approaches, highlight key challenges and conclude with future directions toward reliable, transparent, and privacy-preserving clinical applications.
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This talk will introduce the common multimodal learning approaches, highlight key challenges and conclude with future directions toward reliable, transparent, and privacy-preserving clinical applications. |
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March 13 – April 5 Exhibition: “Limits of Freedom”
Limits of Freedom, an exhibition created by UNCG’s Public History Program, is a part of the America 250 NC Commemorative project. Limits of Freedom highlights the role that enslaved individuals had in making the nation despite being barred from the freedom the country proclaims. |
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March 13 – April 5 Exhibition: “Limits of Freedom”
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The Census is our most fundamental tool for measuring who lives in the United States, and where. Ever since the founding of the country, the categories have reflected how Americans think about ourselves, and the data gets used for everything from funding allocations to political districting. So, it might be surprising that the most recent Decennial Census included intentional injections of random numbers to noise the data for privacy protection. This was hugely controversial! In this talk, Moon Duchin will explain some of the history and the impacts of how we enumerate the country. |
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Sullivan Room 201: How Nature Uses Radical Chemistry to Build Peptide Antibiotics” |
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March 13 – April 5 Exhibition: “Limits of Freedom”
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Our spring events get a little more personal, as we emphasize the “art” in the Art of Connecting. Featuring Dr. Lynn Harter – Professor of Communication at Ohio University, and Peacehaven – a longtime CST community partner, these events promise performances, arts & crafts, and highly-interactive workshops. |
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Following the March 24 Keynote Event, this workshop will give students and community members a chance to engage with our guest – Lynn Harter, and our community partners – Peacehaven, in an interactive, arts-based collaboration. |
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The College of Arts and Sciences Belonging, Opportunity, and Wellbeing Committee is pleased to host its first CAS Book Club in spring 2026. Over two afternoons (Friday, March 27 and Friday, April 24, both from 3-5pm in Foust 206), we will be discussing Matthew Desmond's "Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City."
UNCG’s Spitz Projector will project the stars, planets, Sun and Moon onto the interior of our 20-foot dome. |
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March 13 – April 5 Exhibition: “Limits of Freedom”
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From the UNCG Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures: Come experience a wide-array of hands-on mini workshops presented by UNCG faculty, staff, students, and community members and leave with a variety of new skills! Refreshments provided. All are welcome! |
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Hosted by the UNCG Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures along with the Office of Cultural Engagement, this roundtable will explore stories, challenges, and practical strategies to build trust across languages and systems within our communities.
Join us for a unique film screening & live hip hop performance! Shaolin Jazz will perform a special CAN I KICK IT? presentation on Wednesday, April 1st at the Elliott University Center Auditorium. |