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Wind turbines at Block Island Wind RI
UMass Dartmouth’s School for Marine Science and Technology receives grant to create new offshore wind graduate certificate program

The new program in Ocean Observing, Modeling, and Management of Offshore Wind will begin enrolling students in spring 2025

PhD student David Anchieta in Sydney, Australia
Electrical engineering PhD student wins Best Paper Award from Acoustical Society of America

David Campos Anchieta recently received the award for a paper he presented at the ASA meeting in Sydney, Australia

Recipients and Chancellor Mark Fuller
Corsairs honored: 51st Alumni Awards celebrate extraordinary excellence

Students, faculty, alumni, and friends of UMass Dartmouth convened in the Marketplace on campus to honor five Corsairs for their outstanding professional and community contributions.

UMass Dartmouth receives $1M from Greater Fall River Development Corporation with $500,000 in matching funds from the UMass Foundation for local student scholarships

Greater Fall River Development Corporation Scholarship will support Fall River area students while at UMass Dartmouth

Left to Right: Adam Katz '97, owner of PLAY Arcade, and senior marketing majors Vanessa Pino, Kalvin Garcia, and Kristine Yancey
Marketing majors partner with local New Bedford businesses

Senior marketing management class helps NB100! small businesses develop brand identity and create strategic marketing plan

The 2024 Outstanding Scholarship Mentorship awards announced

Awards were given for Outstanding Scholarship by Graduate and Undergraduate students and Outstanding Mentorship by Faculty on Scholarship

Justice Geraldine Hines, Martin Kurzweil, and Steve Pemberton
UMass Dartmouth to award compassionate and innovative leaders with Honorary Degrees during Commencement

Justice Geraldine Hines, Martin Kurzweil, and Steve Pemberton to be honored during 2024 Commencement Ceremony

Feature Stories

Feature stories
Apr
25
12:00AM
Physics Master of Science Research Project by Zak Longinidis

Topic: A Model For the N-Baryon Spectrum Location: SENG -201 Abstract: For our research this semester, we have been using a model developed by Dr. J.P. Hsu in order to approximate energy eigenvalues for given sub-spectra of N-baryon states. In particular, I have been taking rough estimates given by the model, and adjusting values for the coupling constant and potential energy in order to better fit the experimental data we are comparing to. I will also be giving a brief overview of the relativistic quantum shell model for confining 3-quark system, and talking about a possible range of light quark masses that are acceptable for quarks to have in order for this model to produce reasonable numerical results for baryon spectra. Advisor(s): Dr. JP Hsu, Physics Department (jhsu@umassd.edu) NOTE: All PHY Graduate Students are ENCOURAGED to attend. Open to the public. All interested parties are invited to attend.

Apr
25
1:00PM
CPE Master of Science Thesis Defense by Christopher Dentremont - ECE Department

Topic: Dataset Generation for Deep Learning to Authenticate Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) at Physical Layer for Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) of Transportation Infrastructure Location: Lester W. Cory Conference Room, Science & Engineering Building (SENG), Room 213A Zoom Conference Link: https://umassd.zoom.us/j/93281343753 Meeting ID: 932 8134 3753 Passcode: 518247 Abstract: A wireless sensor network (WSN) for structural health monitoring (SHM) is a network with autonomous, spatially distributed sensor nodes that communicate wirelessly in a cooperative way to monitor physical or environmental conditions. WSN for SHM has garnered interest for protecting transportation infrastructure for the safe operation and maintenance of bridges due to their ability to collect real-time data. Two concerns that arise when designing and deploying these systems are energy consumption and information security. Limited battery capacity on sensor nodes, especially on bridges, can significantly shorten WSN's lifetime. WSNs are left vulnerable to attacks on data integrity, confidentiality and availability from malicious actors masquerading as sensor nodes. This thesis proposes a scheme to protect data transmissions in WSNs for SHM without sacrificing energy consumption. The scheme solves these problems by combining state-of-the-art technologies in deep learning, radio frequency (RF) fingerprinting and RF energy harvesting. RF Fingerprinting leverages process imperfections in transceivers that can be used in a deep neural network to authenticate known sensor nodes. Deep learning is also less computationally intensive than more common forms of data security like encryption and decryption. RF energy harvesting harnesses electromagnetic waves to convert to electrical energy that powers sensor nodes wirelessly. Deep learning requires a dataset to train the model and each device needs its own dataset generation just like collecting fingerprints to establish a directory. This unique feature due to WSN for SHM of transportation infrastructure calls for the need for a framework to systematically generate datasets from individual sensor nodes. This brings out a novel approach of common applications in deep learning. The work shown acts as a proof of concept for this framework of data generation by building a prototype to present its feasibility through experimentation with using RF energy harvesting. This work also provides a framework for generating a dataset of device RF fingerprint to be used in a deep learning network to authenticate each sensor node. Co-Advisor(s): Dr. Hong Liu, Commonwealth Professor, Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, UMASS Dartmouth Committee Members: Dr. Liudong Xing, Professor, Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, UMASS Dartmouth; Dr. Ruolin Zhou, Associate Professor, Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, UMASS Dartmouth NOTE: All ECE Graduate Students are ENCOURAGED to attend. All interested parties are invited to attend. Open to the public. *For further information, please contact Dr. Hong Liu via email at hliu@umassd.edu

Apr
25
2:30PM
CPE Master of Science Thesis Defense by Bryce Afonso - ECE Department

Topic: Network-less Wireless Sensing for Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) of Bridges: Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) Investigations Location: Lester W. Cory Conference Room, Science & Engineering Building (SENG), Room 213A Zoom Conference Link: https://umassd.zoom.us/j/93281343753 Meeting ID: 932 8134 3753 Passcode: 518247 Abstract: The Internet of Things (IoT) has significantly advanced the application of Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) in Structural Health Monitoring (SHM), particularly for civil engineering infrastructure such as bridges. Despite the advancements, the widespread application of WSNs in SHM remains hindered by their limited network lifetime, posing a significant hurdle to their adoption. Furthermore, IoT and WSNs open a new attack surface. Designing SHM systems with wireless sensors utilizing no network allows system resiliency to cyber-attacks. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) have been heralded for their potential to overcome these limitations through secure and efficient data collection. This thesis expands on the existing UAV application by proposing a novel UAV-assisted WSN system that employs Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) as the communication protocol for synchronized data gathering in SHM systems. Our design diverges from traditional multi-hop WSNs by leveraging UAVs as mobile data sinks, reducing the energy burden on individual sensor nodes, and significantly prolonging the sensor's operational life. Through an analytical study, we demonstrate that our UAV-BLE system offers a remarkable improvement in network lifetime in comparison to conventional network routed WSNs. Additionally, the use of BLE facilitates a lightweight authentication scheme, providing secure wireless communication between sensor nodes and the UAV. Thus, this novel approach enhances the overall robustness and longevity of SHM systems. A proof-of-concept implementation utilizing a PASCO bridge kit equipped with wireless load cell sensors, demonstrates the feasibility of our approach. To the best of the authors' knowledge, this is the first exploration of a BLE-centric synchronization scheme in the context of SHM, marking a significant leap toward secure, safe, reliable, and efficient monitoring of civil engineering structures. Co-Advisor(s): Dr. Hong Liu, Commonwealth Professor, Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, UMASS Dartmouth Committee Members: Dr. Liudong Xing, Professor, Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, UMASS Dartmouth; Dr. Ruolin Zhou, Associate Professor, Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, UMASS Dartmouth; Dr. Tzuyang Yu, Professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, UMASS Lowell NOTE: All ECE Graduate Students are ENCOURAGED to attend. All interested parties are invited to attend. Open to the public. *For further information, please contact Dr. Hong Liu via email at hliu@umassd.edu

Apr
25
4:30PM
Student Leadership Awards Celebration

Join us as we celebrate our outstanding student leaders and their accomplishments! The Marketplace | UMass Dartmouth 4:30pm Hors D'oeuvres 5:00 pm Presentation of Awards RSVP to claib@umassd.edu by Mon April 22, 2024 Contact: Chris Laib, claib@umassd.edu 508-999-8217 Sponsored by the Division of Student Affairs

Apr
25
7:00PM
Italian Studies Film Series - Once Upon a TIme in the West (1968)

Italian Studies invites you to enjoy a year of Spaghetti Westerns. Starting in the 1960s Italian directors began to apply their own artistic approach and their own political and social concerns to the old-fashioned western genre. The result? Some of the most artistically exciting movies of the 1960s and 1970s. All films will be screened in LARTS-111 at 7:00. For questions write msneider@umassd.edu.

Apr
26
2:00PM
Reproductive Rights and Advocacy in Action from the Perspective of a Doula

Dashanna Hanlon will share her perspective as a Black Doula on Reproductive Rights and Advocacy in Action. Come find out about career pathways in birthing justice, what does a birth Doula do? She will discuss her role in fighting the black maternal mortality health epidemic in the United States. Light Refreshments will be served. Bring your friends! Sponsored by Women's and Gender Studies and Health & Society. Room CCB 340

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