Application-driven machine learning for climate action
About this Event
2251 SW Campus Way, Corvallis, OR 97331
Zoom.
Speaker: David Rolnick, School of Computer Science, McGill University, Quebec, Canada
Location: Bexell 415 (remote talk)
Date & Time: April 3, 2-3 p.m.
Abstract:
Machine learning is increasingly being called upon to help address climate change, from processing satellite imagery to modeling Earth systems. Such settings represent an important frontier for machine learning innovation, where traditional paradigms of large, general-purpose datasets and models often fall short. In this talk, we show how an application-driven paradigm for algorithm design can respond to problem-specific goals and incorporate relevant domain knowledge. We introduce novel techniques that leverage the structure of the problem (such as physical constraints and multi-modal self-supervision) to improve accuracy and usability across applications, including monitoring land use with remote sensing, downscaling climate data, and modeling species distributions.
Bio:
David Rolnick is an Assistant Professor and Canada CIFAR AI Chair in the School of Computer Science at McGill University and at Mila – Quebec AI Institute. He is a Co-founder and Chair of Climate Change AI and serves as Scientific Co-director of Sustainability in the Digital Age and co-lead of the Global Center on AI and Biodiversity Change (ABC). Dr. Rolnick is a Sloan Research Fellow and an AI2050 Early Career Fellow and was named to the MIT Technology Review’s 2021 list of “35 Innovators Under 35” for his work in building the field of AI and climate change. He received his Ph.D. in Applied Mathematics from MIT and is a former Fulbright Scholar, NSF Graduate Research Fellow, and NSF Mathematical Sciences Postdoctoral Research Fellow.