Difference between revisions of "User:Moose569"
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My last name, Gauthier, is pronounced like Gaw-thee-err, not like the French pronunciation, which sounds much like the band Gotye. | My last name, Gauthier, is pronounced like Gaw-thee-err, not like the French pronunciation, which sounds much like the band Gotye. | ||
− | Article Related to the Grand Engineering Challenge of Reverse-Engineering the Human Brain: [http://www.jstor.org/stable/2666866?origin=JSTOR-pdf], Vincent Walsh, The Royal Society, updated 2000, accessed September 9th 2012 (General) | + | Article Related to the Grand Engineering Challenge of Reverse-Engineering the Human Brain: Reverse Engineering the Human Brain [http://www.jstor.org/stable/2666866?origin=JSTOR-pdf], Vincent Walsh, The Royal Society, updated 2000, accessed September 9th 2012 (General) |
Favourite Demo on MATLAB: My favourite demo was the Loma Prieta Earthquake demo because it showed how MATLAB could be used to show real-world data in a much more useful format than just the numbers themselves. It presented a lot of new ideas about data mapping which I found interesting and hope to explore in the future. | Favourite Demo on MATLAB: My favourite demo was the Loma Prieta Earthquake demo because it showed how MATLAB could be used to show real-world data in a much more useful format than just the numbers themselves. It presented a lot of new ideas about data mapping which I found interesting and hope to explore in the future. |
Latest revision as of 00:46, 10 September 2012
About Me: I am a student at Duke University and am majoring in biomedical engineering.
Name: My last name, Gauthier, is pronounced like Gaw-thee-err, not like the French pronunciation, which sounds much like the band Gotye.
Article Related to the Grand Engineering Challenge of Reverse-Engineering the Human Brain: Reverse Engineering the Human Brain [1], Vincent Walsh, The Royal Society, updated 2000, accessed September 9th 2012 (General)
Favourite Demo on MATLAB: My favourite demo was the Loma Prieta Earthquake demo because it showed how MATLAB could be used to show real-world data in a much more useful format than just the numbers themselves. It presented a lot of new ideas about data mapping which I found interesting and hope to explore in the future.