Blog

  • RiverCure: a new paradigm in flood modelling and simulation

    RiverCure: a new paradigm in flood modelling and simulation

    The second RiverCure workshop took place on 02 June 2022 at Instituto Superior Técnico, signaling the close of this four-year FCT-funded project that brought together INESC-ID, Instituto Superior Técnico and Agência Portuguesa do Ambiente (APA).

    The workshop included an overview of the RiverCure project and its main outputs, as well as the mathematical modelling research, laboratory and field work it involved and the conception, implementation and applications of the “RiverCure Portal”.

    Ran from June 2018 to June 2022, RiverCure (full title “RiverCure: Curating and assimilating crowdsourced and authoritative data to reduce uncertainty in river flow modelling”) proposed to reduce the uncertainty involved in flood simulation and forecasting, doing so by designing and implementing a novel Web Geographic Information System (GIS) platform the “RiverCure Portal” that combines observations and hydrodynamic modelling tools for the operational response, emergency preparedness, and risk assessment stages of the flood risk management cycle.

    In addition to combining observations with computer modelling, RiverCure explored recent advances in computer vision and deep learning to classify geo-referenced images of flooding events shared by citizens in social media, evaluating the use of neural networks computing systems that mimic biological neural networks by processing information through a series of interconnected mathematical functions represented by “artificial neurons” in discriminating images showing direct evidence of a flood while estimating the severity of the flooding event.

    RiverCure was coordinated by Rui Ferreira (IST/CERIS) and Alberto Silva (INESC-ID). Rui Ferreira is Associate Professor at Instituto Superior Técnico and a CERIS Hydraulics Research Group senior researcher. Alberto Silva is researcher within the INESC-ID Information and Decision Support Systems Research Area and Associate Professor at the Department of Computer Science of Instituto Superior Técnico.

  • Doctoral Symposium on Artificial Intelligence at EPIA’22

    Doctoral Symposium on Artificial Intelligence at EPIA’22

    EPIA 2022 is currently inviting submissions to its Doctoral Symposium on Artificial Intelligence (AI), with a paper submission deadline of 15 June 2022.

    The EPIA Conference on AI is a well-established European conference in the field of AI. The 21st edition of the EPIA conference will take place at Instituto Superior Técnico, University of Lisbon, from 31 August to 02 September 2022.

    As in previous editions, this international conference is hosted with the patronage of the Portuguese Association for Artificial Intelligence (APPIA). The purpose of this conference is to promote research in all areas of AI, covering both theoretical/foundational issues and applications, and the scientific exchange among researchers, engineers and practitioners in related disciplines.

    The Program Chairs for EPIA 2022 (including Ana Paiva, INESC-ID researcher and Professor at Instituto Superior Técnico), together with the International Steering Committee, have selected a number of different thematic tracks to be featured on the conference, covering a wide spectrum of AI topics.

    For more details plese check out EPIA 2020’s website and and the Doctoral Symposium webpage.

  • EV4EU launches today!

    EV4EU launches today!

    EV4EU launches today, 01 June 2022! With a duration of four years, EV4EU is funded by the European Union in 9-million euros through Horizon Europe, the new research and innovation programme for the period 2021-2027.

    Studies indicate that the massive use of electric vehicles will significantly contribute to the carbon neutrality goals set for 2050, as defined by the European Commission. However, the mass deployment of electric vehicles (EVs) still presents several challenges. To address these challenges, the “Electric Vehicles Management for carbon neutrality in Europe” (EV4EU) project will propose and implement user-centric Vehicle-to-Everything (V2X) management strategies, creating the conditions for the mass deployment of electric vehicles. The proposed V2X management strategies will be tested at four demonstration sites in Portugal on the island of São Miguel; in the Mesogia area in Greece; at Risø and Rønne, island of Bornholm, Denmark; and in Slovenia across a consortium of sixteen entities from four European countries led by INESC-ID.

    To mark the project launch, we spoke with Hugo Morais senior researcher at INESC-ID, Assistant Professor at the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (DEEC) of Instituto Superior Técnico, and EV4EU project coordinator about this new landmark project.

    What do you think is, currently, the biggest barrier in the massive implementation of electric mobility?

    Hugo Morais: The massive implementation of electric vehicles implies systemic changes at different levels. In addition to barriers related to the technology of the vehicles themselves, which have evolved very quickly in recent years, it is important to overcome barriers related to the diversity and complementarity of charging technologies (slow charging / fast charging), strategies for integrating charging systems in existing installations, namely in residential buildings, service buildings, car parks, energy communities and companies operating fleets of vehicles (light and heavy). Additionally, it is important to mitigate problems that may arise from a significant increase in the electrical power requested from the electrical grids, as well as the lack of planning strategies at the city level to face the massive integration of electric cars. Finally, it is important to develop interaction strategies with electric vehicle users that allow them to get the most out of their vehicles and the best way to charge them, assessing whether there are any impacts on battery performance due to bidirectional charging and with different powers.

    What are the main objectives of the EV4EU consortium?

    Hugo Morais: The consortium aims to develop a set of strategies [meant to create] solutions that [facilitate] overcoming the barriers identified above.

    How will EV4EU’s multiplicity of partners contribute to its goals?

    Hugo Morais: The consortium is made up of entities covering the entire electric mobility value chain. In addition to the R&D entities, the consortium has an electric vehicle manufacturer (Citroen), an electric charger manufacturer (ABB), a technology provider (Circle), a charging station operator (PPC), an aggregator ( GEN-i) and four distribution network operators (EDA, BEOF, HEDNO and Elektro Celje). The consortium also has a government entity (Regional Directorate of Energy of the Regional Government of the Azores), an entity focused on social sciences (SEL) and end users (Campus Bornholm). The project also has the support of the Portuguese association of public transport (ANTRAM), a manufacturer of wind systems (Vestas), a business incubator in Slovenia and municipal entities where the demonstrators will be developed.

    The demonstrators are complementary both in terms of the solutions used and the strategies to be tested. In Portugal, the demonstrator aims to develop and test V2X solutions and business models that allow the integration of EVs in buildings and companies. In particular, these solutions will be validated in private homes, at the facilities of the Regional Energy Directorate of the Regional Government of the Azores and at the Electricity Company of the Azores. In this demonstrator, a new bidirectional charger that will facilitate the charging of several vehicles simultaneously will be tested, reducing the overall cost of the installation. In Denmark, different car park management strategies will be tested considering different types and uses of car parks. Additionally, coordination methodologies between EVs and renewable production units will be tested in order to demonstrate the complementarity between the technologies. In Greece, a new platform that allows for more efficient management of charging stations, as well as greater interaction with EV users, will be tested. Several business models will be validated through this platform. Additionally, strategies to mitigate the impact of EVs on electrical networks will be investigated. In Slovenia, the demonstrator aims to demonstrate the flexibility introduced by EVs in terms of the management of electricity networks as well as to assess the value that this flexibility could have in electricity markets. These services will be coordinated between the distribution network operator and an aggregator in order to create benefits for end users.

    What do you hope will be EV4EU’s biggest impact after its four-year run?

    Hugo Morais: From the above, we can consider that the project will have an important impact on society, proposing new solutions and business models aimed at creating the right conditions for the massive integration of electric cars, contributing to more sustainable mobility.

  • Francisco Melo completes his “Agregação” in Computer Science and Engineering at Instituto Superior Técnico

    Francisco Melo completes his “Agregação” in Computer Science and Engineering at Instituto Superior Técnico

    Francisco António Chaves Saraiva de Melo INESC-ID researcher within the Artificial Intelligence for People and Society Research Area and Associate Professor at the Department of Computer Science and Engineering of Instituto Superior Técnico has today successfully completed his Agregação in Computer Science and Engineering.

    Across two sessions, on 30th and 31st May 2022, Melo presented the course unit report Planning, Learning, and Intelligent Decision Making” and the seminar “Reinforcement learning: A dynamical systems viewpoint”.

    Our warmest congratulations to Francisco!

     

    (Photo credit: https://tecnicomais.pt)

  • Filipa Correia receives best PhD thesis award in Robotics

    Filipa Correia receives best PhD thesis award in Robotics

    Filipa Correia has been awarded the best national PhD thesis prize by the Portuguese Society for Robotics (Sociedade Portuguesa de Robótica) for her work “Group Intelligence in Social Robots”, supervised by Professor Ana Paiva and Professor Francisco Melo (INESC-ID researchers and professors at Instituto Superior Técnico, IST). (Pedro Vicente, from the Institute for Systems and Robotics, ISR, was equally awarded a PhD thesis prize)

    Filipa Correia is currently a postdoctoral researcher in the Artificial Intelligence for People and Society (AIPS) Research Area at INESC-ID and at the ITI). Her prize-winning doctoral research work was developed at AIPS and explored the challenges of creating social robots that sustain cohesive alliances with humans in multi-party team settings, including the creation of autonomous robotic characters.

    Filipa Correia’s thesis is available in the IST online repository here.

    Investigating AI systems (agents, robots, etc.) that are social and pro-social — with research work that spans many different topics in affective computing, planning, games & interactive storytelling, robotics, evolutionary game theory and machine learning — AIPS is one of the eleven Research Areas that make up the research tissue of INESC-ID, covering a wide range of topics in computer science and engineering and electrical and computer engineering. You can learn more about the INESC-ID Research Areas here.

  • Nuno Lopes receives research grants from Google and Woven Alpha

    Nuno Lopes receives research grants from Google and Woven Alpha

    Nuno Lopes researcher within the High Performance Computing Architectures and Systems Research Area at INESC-ID and Associate Professor at the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at Instituto Superior Técnico — has been awarded research grants from Google and Woven Alpha (a subsidiary of Toyota) worth €35,000 and $30,000, respectively.

    The grant from Woven Alpha will fund Alive2, a project that Lopes has been leading for several years and aims at verifying that a compiler a computer program that translates computer code across programming languages is working correctly. “Toyota uses LLVM (the compiler supported by Alive2) to compile the code for the cars, so they want to ensure that the generated code is correct,” Lopes explains. “For example, a bug in the compiler can cause an accident in a car because the code will behave differently from what was programmed. Alive2 has already found over a hundred bugs in LLVM and now continues to ensure that new bugs are not introduced into the compiler.” With this grant Lopes expects to increase the scope of Alive2 by supporting loop optimizations.

    The Google grant, on the other hand, will fund a new project, also in the area of ​​compilers, meant to improve interoperability between C++ and Rust, two popular programing languages. As Lopes puts it, “Rust is a newer, more secure language than C++. On the other hand, it is impossible to rewrite all the C++ code that exists. Thus, we intend to investigate the best way for libraries developed in both languages ​​to work together easily and safely.”

    Both companies offer these grants to encourage research in the area of ​​compilers and train more people in it, Lopes comments, recognizing this as a challenging area to recruit people in. As Lopes explains, research on compilers “is a very important area of ​​computing because we want software to be written in increasingly high-level languages in order to increase programmers’ productivity, but also to allow non-programmers to write small programs. On the other hand, we want the code to run fast, take up little space, and be secure. It’s a huge challenge that compilers have to solve.”

    And what do grants from Google and Woven Alpha mean for a researcher at Nuno Lopes’ career stage? “These [grants] are very important to me because I joined the academic world (and IST) only in January of this year. Before, I was working in the industry outside the country (at Microsoft Research). These grants allow me to have [some funds] to start activities at IST, namely to hire students and buy equipment.”

    High Performance Computing Architectures and Systems is one the eleven Research Areas at INESC-ID. For more details on these eleven areas, covering a wide range of topics in Computer Science and Engineering and Electrical and Computer Engineering, please pop over to our website.

  • INESC-ID celebrates Técnico’s 111th birthday with an afternoon of technology outreach

    INESC-ID celebrates Técnico’s 111th birthday with an afternoon of technology outreach

    Today — 23 May 2022 — Instituto Superior Técnico (IST) celebrates its 111th birthday while hosting Dia do Técnico, its annual Open Day.

    INESC-ID took part in Dia do Técnico by hosting games and activities on conservation biology, augmented reality and telecommunications with the collaboration of researchers from the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (DEEC) and the Department of Computer Science and Engineering (DEI).

    With visits from students and families of all ages, Dia do Técnico is a great opportunity for varied publics to get a flavour of the research and teaching taking place at IST, with INESC-ID joining the party with a flare of technology outreach.

  • INESC-ID researchers honoured with Universidade de Lisboa / Caixa Geral de Depósitos Scientific Awards

    INESC-ID researchers honoured with Universidade de Lisboa / Caixa Geral de Depósitos Scientific Awards

    Three INESC-ID researchers have been honoured at this year’s Universidade de Lisboa / Caixa Geral de Depósitos Scientific Awards (Prémios Científicos Universidade de Lisboa / Caixa Geral de Depósitos).

    The awardees lists recognised Professor Leonel Augusto Pires Seabra de Sousa (Full Professor at the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at IST), who received this year’s award  in the Electrical Engineering and Aerospace Engineering (Avionics) category, Professor Rui Manuel Gameiro de Castro (Associate Professor at the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at IST), who received this year’s award in the Energy and Environmental Engineering category, as well as Professor Pedro Tiago Gonçalves Monteiro (Associate Professor at the Department of Computer Science and Engineering), who received an honourable mention in the Computer Science and Computer Engineering area.

    The UL/CGD Scientific Awards and Honourable Mentions are bestowed across twenty-six areas, recognising scientific research activity while encouraging the practice of publication in international journals of recognized quality.

    On having been recognised with the Electrical Engineering and Aerospace Engineering (Avionics) award, Professor Sousa accepted it as “a recognition of the quality of the research work carried out, which is always good. But, fundamentally, I hope that it will be an incentive for the Electrical and Computer Engineering researchers of the younger generations to do even better, namely those who are at INESC-ID.” Professor Castro added that “receiving this award [in Energy and Environmental Engineering] means recognition of the work of my research team in Renewable Energies and Energy Transition, always with the aim of promoting the name of INESC-ID within the international scientific community.”

    The award ceremony will take place on 28 June 2022, 6:30pm, at Salão Nobre of Reitoria da Universidade de Lisboa.

  • INESC-ID represented at Encontro Ciência ’22

    INESC-ID represented at Encontro Ciência ’22

    INESC-ID researchers and their work were showcased at Encontro Ciência ’22, which took place at Centro de Congressos de Lisboa this week.

    On 16 May Professor Inês Lynce, INESC-ID researcher and Full Professor at Instituto Superior Técnico, as well as co-director of the CMU Portugal Program, participated in the session Knowledge Creation and Talent Development under the CMU Portugal Program, in which she delivered an overview of CMU Portugal Program Knowledge Educational initiatives throughout the years. This same session had the participation, among others, of Maria Casimiro and John Mendonça, PhD students and INESC-D early stage researchers.

    INESC-ID researchers also took part in practical demonstrations. The CMU Portugal-funded project Multilingual AI Agent Assistants (MAIA) which aims to develop a multilingual conversational platform, supported by machine translation and dialogue systems, where AI agents assist human agents was showcased on 18 May. MAIA is being developed in partnership between Carnegie Mellon University, INESC-ID, Instituto de Telecomunicações and Unbabel, under Principal Investigator Helena Moniz, INESC-ID researcher within the Human Language Technologies (HLT) research area.

  • NII International Internship Program (Tokyo) – Applications open until 20 May 2022

    NII International Internship Program (Tokyo) – Applications open until 20 May 2022

    The International Internship Program at the National Institute of Informatics (NII), Tokyo, is back following limitations due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    The NII International Internship Program is an exchange activity with students from institutions with which NII has concluded a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) agreement, including INESC-ID. This incentive program aims at giving interns the opportunity for professional and personal development by engaging in research activities under the guidance and supervision of NII researchers. Both MSc and PhD students are eligible.

    The internship activities should extend for a period of 2 to 6 months. A scholarship of about 171,000 yen per month is granted. However, the costs to travel to Tokyo are not included. The internship should start before the end of March 2023.

    Candidates should contact Prof. Rui Prada (rui.prada[at]gaips.inesc-id.pt) and send him the application form, a detailed CV (grades included), and a motivation letter by *May 20th*. Candidates need, to contact potential supervisors at NII, by email, for the topics they want, beforehand. This email exchange is needed in the application process as well.

    More information, including the list of topics and the application form, can be on the program’s website.

     

    We spoke with Prof. Prada about the NII program. Here are a few more details on this scheme:

    How did this collaboration with the NII Tokyo start?

    [Rui Prada:] It all started after a six month visit in 2009. I went to Professor Helmut Prendinger’s laboratory to work on games applied to the 3D Internet, which is currently better known as “Metaverse”. We explored the use of SecondLife and OpenSimulator for teaching games, and I developed a game about the environmental impact of agriculture. During my stay I learned about the MOUs that the NII develops around the world and I decided to start one for INESC-ID. The agreement has been in effect since 2010.

    What type of project/collaboration are you developing?

    [Rui Prada:] Initially, we developed games applied to various domains, e.g., for laboratory safety training or to collect navigation data from drivers to create models about their ecological behavior. This game was exposed to the public in several places, in a museum and online, and also involved the collaboration of an Australian institution. More recently we have been working on interaction with robots and artificial intelligence models for unmanned drones.

    I emphasize, however, that although a large part of the collaboration with the NII passes through me, the collaboration has extended to other INESC-ID researchers, for example Bruno Martins and David Matos.

    What do you see as being the value of this collaboration? What type of outcome or future directions do you expect?

    [Rui Prada:] International collaboration is always positive, but this one in particular helps us to see research problems from different perspectives due to the cultural differences that exist between the two countries. One of the current challenges we are working on focuses on the study, design and development of technology that supports a future reality, perhaps not too distant, in which we live together with different types of drones in our society. The question that arises is what infrastructure does a city need to allow millions of drones to cohabit with people. For example, you have to think of a traffic management system (probably in the air space), which is expected to be very intense.

    I want to point out that this MOU has a very important feature, as it financially supports several student internships per year at the NII. So far we have been able to send 38 INESC-ID students for 6-month internships at the NII. This collaboration therefore opens up an excellent opportunity for our students. Most return with a very enriching experience, but some stay, developing their career there. One of the first students to go under this arrangement ended up creating a company in Tokyo that has already opened an office in Lisbon and employs people who were at NII: Spider Labs.