search

UMD     This Site





In this screen shot from the presentation, at left the bat is seen flying in pursuit of its prey; to the right, the path of the bat and the direction of its sonar emitance is tracked.

In this screen shot from the presentation, at left the bat is seen flying in pursuit of its prey; to the right, the path of the bat and the direction of its sonar emitance is tracked.

 

A multimedia presentation by Professor Cynthia Moss (Psychology/ISR) and her graduate student, Kaushik Ghose, has won first place in the multimedia non-interactive division of the 2004 Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge. The challenge is sponsored by the National Science Foundation and Science magazine.

Moss and Ghose's presentation shows how a bat uses echolocation to find and capture its prey. The judges were impressed with the combination of video, sound, and sonar that puts the viewer in the bat's world. Said judge Thomas Lucas, "This is something we never get to see. It always happens in the dark."

| View the winning presentation | Announcement at Science magazine | Announcement at NSF |

?Sept 2004

September 2, 2004


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Generations of Graduates: A Full-Circle Celebration

Apply: Chair of the Fischell Dept of Bioengineering

Capstone Design Expo 2026: Students Solve for Maryland & Beyond

CS/ECE Professors Receive IEEE ICRA Most Influential Paper Award

New Lecture Series Unites Experts to Solve Critical Challenges

NIH Funds "Smart Pill" for Gut Health Monitoring

UMD to Lead DARPA-Funded Effort to Accelerate Mathematical Discovery With AI

ION Storage Systems Announced Successful Customer Qualification

Engineering safer, more sustainable AI for all

Reliability and Availability Analysis of Data Center Thermal Management System Presented at CEEE Consortium

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home