Difference between revisions of "User:Tgh18"
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Grand Challenge: Reverse-engineer the brain | Grand Challenge: Reverse-engineer the brain | ||
*[http://www.gizmag.com/neuromorphic-chips/28586/ Neuromorphic chips could help reverse-engineer the human brain], Dario Borghino, gizmag.com, updated 5 August 2013, accessed 13 September 2014 (Grand Challenge) | *[http://www.gizmag.com/neuromorphic-chips/28586/ Neuromorphic chips could help reverse-engineer the human brain], Dario Borghino, gizmag.com, updated 5 August 2013, accessed 13 September 2014 (Grand Challenge) | ||
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+ | ==Favorite MATLAB Demonstration== | ||
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+ | My favorite one is Game of Life, for it shows how a few principles can give rise to complex behaviour, and MATLAB's user-friendliness in programming such computations. |
Latest revision as of 20:33, 13 September 2014
Contents
About me
I am currently a freshman at Duke University Pratt School of Engineering. My hometown is Shenzhen, China, a nice city without the burden of too much history.
Interests
- Chinese fiddle
- Manga-style sketching
- Watching Fairy Tail
- Eating salads
- Speaking, and singing in showers, in Japanese
Intended majors
Biomedical Engineering and Neuroscience. Not sure what my career would be though...
About EGR103
I enjoyed Dr.G's personifications of MATLAB functions, and the frequent use of puppies. What about kittens?
Grand Challenges for Engineering Article
Grand Challenge: Reverse-engineer the brain
- Neuromorphic chips could help reverse-engineer the human brain, Dario Borghino, gizmag.com, updated 5 August 2013, accessed 13 September 2014 (Grand Challenge)
Favorite MATLAB Demonstration
My favorite one is Game of Life, for it shows how a few principles can give rise to complex behaviour, and MATLAB's user-friendliness in programming such computations.