Difference between revisions of "User:Aa325"

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== About Me ==
 
== About Me ==
I am currently an undergraduate at Duke University, studying Biomedical Engineering and Computer Science.
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I am currently an undergraduate at [http://duke.edu Duke University], studying [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biomedical_Engineering Biomedical Engineering] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_science Computer Science].
  
  
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I am taking four courses this semester:
 
I am taking four courses this semester:
  
* Engineering (EGR 103)
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* Engineering [http://pundit.pratt.duke.edu/wiki/EGR_103 (EGR 103)]
 
* Calculus (MATH 111)
 
* Calculus (MATH 111)
 
* Chemistry (CHEM 110)
 
* Chemistry (CHEM 110)
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== Grand Challenges for Engineering Articles ==
 
== Grand Challenges for Engineering Articles ==
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Below is an article related to the "Reverse-engineer the brain" Grand Challenge"
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* [http://www.wired.com/2013/10/paulallenqa/ Inside Paul Allen's Plan to Reverse-Engineer the Human Brain], Greg Miller, Wired, created October 24th, 2013, accessed September 8th 2014 (Reverse-engineer the brain)
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== MATLAB Demonstrations ==
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My favorite Matlab demonstration is the "Earth's Topography" demonstration, because it shows a real-life situation that was modeled by MATLAB. It was very cool to read the various layers of the code that eventually created the full topographic map, especially because we just used the "hold on/off" command in our last lab.

Latest revision as of 06:50, 14 September 2014

About Me

I am currently an undergraduate at Duke University, studying Biomedical Engineering and Computer Science.


Current Courses

I am taking four courses this semester:

  • Engineering (EGR 103)
  • Calculus (MATH 111)
  • Chemistry (CHEM 110)
  • Writing (WRITING 101)


Projects

No projects yet.


Grand Challenges for Engineering Articles

Below is an article related to the "Reverse-engineer the brain" Grand Challenge"


MATLAB Demonstrations

My favorite Matlab demonstration is the "Earth's Topography" demonstration, because it shows a real-life situation that was modeled by MATLAB. It was very cool to read the various layers of the code that eventually created the full topographic map, especially because we just used the "hold on/off" command in our last lab.