Jul. 29, 2016 –
The 2016 SURF- IoT(Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship in the Internet of Things) fellows met at CALIT2 this week to mark the halfway point in the 10-week program. Students presented their individual projects, discussed their findings and answered questions about their work to date.
Ten students were selected this year to participate in SURF IoT. The program is in its twelfth year, and is designed to immerse students in research and applications related to IoT.
SURF IoT, co-sponsored by UCI’s Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP) and CALIT2, provides students with a unique learning experience. Each student has the guidance of a UCI faculty mentor, along with the opportunity to gain experience and advanced training in state-of-the-art facilities and techniques.
Fellows also attend a series of seminars to help enhance knowledge and dialogue about telecommunications and information technology systems and applications. At the conclusion of the program students will present their final research findings at a SURF-IoT Symposium.
This year’s fellows and faculty-mentored research projects:
Arzang Kasiri, computer science major
Augmented Reality IoT Devices Supporting Game-Based Stroke Telerehabilitation
Ruthannah Wang, electrical engineering major
Design of Implantable Ocular Micro Pressure Sensor for Continuous Monitoring
Zuozhi Wang, computer science major
Developing a Code Search Tool to Help IoT Developers in Programming
Pablo Figueroa Lozano, computer science major
Integration of Crowdsourced and Traditional Data for Route Analysis and Route Finding for Pedestrians with Disabilities
Alrin Ryan Lupisan, environmental engineering major
Marching Cubes Made Tangible
Chifeng Wen, computer science major
MediCom – Integrating Multimodal Mobile Health Monitoring Data to Improve Doctor-Patient Communication about Medication Adherence
Xin Hu, computer science major
Mining Instagram/Twitter for Plant Data
Asis Nath, electrical engineering major
Proabot Flotilla – Flocking Autonomous Sailcraft for Oceanographic Research
David Gogokhiya, computer science major
TurtleBot with Qualcomm Snapdragon ARM CPU
– Sharon Henry