User:BrianLin

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About Me!

Me!!

Hi, my name is Brian Lin. Currently a 1st year BME student here at Duke. Some interests include:

  • Barefoot running around Duke and Durham late at night (generally in the 1-3 am range)
  • Eating 14 oz. bags of Swedish fish in the span of two days
  • Playing guitar (mainly Anime music covers at the moment but I'm a big fan of Dispatch, Streetlight Manifesto, Dream Theater, etc.)
  • Learning Chinese (and then hopefully Korean, Cantonese, and Japanese)
  • Cooking/making/baking cool food (like Mochi Ice Cream and Bubble Tea) but not cleaning up
  • Coming up with new frisbee forehand styles
  • Making bad League of Legends puns/jokes
  • Doing pull-ups
  • Squeezing as many 'thank you's, 'please's, and 'bless you's as possible into each day

Grand Challenges

[1] Sherali Zeadally, Gregorio Martinez, Han-Chieh Chao, IEEE Computer Society, April 2013, accessed August 31 2014

MATLAB

Four Linked Tori

Four Linked Tori [2]

I haven't had too much experience in the computer programming world, but with my few forays (including the LaTeX lab), I've really grown to appreciate organization, simplicity, and efficiency. When using R in the past and running T tests and other Stats tests across large matrices of data (such as histone methylation across the blood samples of 80 people), I'd often end up with up to a couple minutes of downtime waiting for the program to run. With that in mind, it's really interesting to see how MATLAB can create a complicated-looking graphic from such a simple program. Of course, this is very different from churning through large amounts of data, but it's impressive nonetheless.