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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260402T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260502T170000
DTSTAMP:20260426T090820
CREATED:20260309T212430Z
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SUMMARY:M.F.A. Exhibition for Environmental Art & Social Practice (EASP)—"Picking up Shells Amid a Tsunami"
DESCRIPTION:The culminating exhibition of the Environmental Art and Social Practice (EASP) M.F.A. program at UC Santa Cruz presents new projects—Picking up Shells Amid a Tsunami 쓰나미가 밀려오는데\, 조개나 줍고 있네—developed through concentrated inquiry over a two-year period and offers a window into the artists’ unique long-term research projects that expand beyond the gallery space.\n—\nFULL SCHEDULE OF EVENTS\n– Ongoing Exhibition: Thurs..\, April 2–Sat.\, May 2\, 2026\n– Opening Celebration: Thurs.\, April 2\, 5:00–7:00 p.m.\n– Artist Roundtable: Thurs.\, April 23\, 5:00–6:00 p.m.\n—\nADMISSION\n– FREE and open to the public\n– Gallery hours are Tues.–Sun.noon–5:00 p.m (closed Mondays)\n—\nPARKING\n– Lot 124 & 125 are the closest parking lots to the event.\n– Parking is by permit or ParkMobile.\n– Refer to TAPS for more parking information.\n—\nABOUT THE EXHIBITION \nNotes from the EASP cohort: \n“The phrase evokes a scene in which\, amid an approaching catastrophe\, someone appears to be idly picking up seashells. In South Korea\, it gained political currency during the 2017 presidential impeachment protests\, when feminist\, disability rights\, and animal rights groups were criticized for bringing their demands into the demonstrations. Their interventions were dismissed as distractions—acts of “picking up shells” at a moment when the sole priority was said to be the president’s removal. \n“We choose to pick up shells nonetheless. Not because the crisis is small\, but because the shells matter. They are the body of the future\, what accumulates slowly\, what endures. One day\, shells become mountains\, and mountains become home. To pick up shells is not to turn away from urgency\, but to insist on a future beyond it. \n“This exhibition comes together through an insistence on the opposite premise: that picking up shells while disaster is at our doorstep is not a distraction\, but a necessity. What gets dismissed as marginal\, secondary\, a mere luxury\, or mistimed\, is precisely where social and political life becomes livable and where dreams\, desire and the imagination open lines of flight towards other worlds. \n“Waves can level buildings once on the shore\, dragging and revealing the damage as they recede. Rather than turning away from the storm\, we acknowledge the multilayered and epistemic devastation caused by centuries of colonial\, patriarchal\, racist violence upon people\, earth and more than human life. We witness the ongoing bifurcation of human and nature that is sedimented into our lives\, languages and social\, material\, infrastructures. \n“The act of bending down to gather shells\, ردم\,  fragments\, sounds\, 뼈\, blue bottles\, grotta\, relationships\, bodies\, cries—composes a score that moves towards forms of care through minor gestures\, embodiment\, ritual\, ofrendas\, listening and beholding.  Mundane and everyday poetics do not negate the scale of devastation and loss\, nor do they refuse engagement. Rather\, they bear witness. They reveal pathways towards endurance\, negotiation\, memory and imagination beyond colonial catastrophe. In this sense\, the exhibition reframes the tsunami not as a singular event or metaphor\, but an invitation us to behold\, actively look\, to sit within the textures of tectonic plates and energy flows\, at the conjuncture where plates meet\, in the flow of energy through tempo\, liquid\, movement\, land\, sound\, ecotone. \n“The wave does not demand one unified response. It forms part of a condition\, a form of everyday accretion\, a movement in and out of different temporalities. Picking up shells while the tsunami unfolds\, amid the tsunami\, alongside the water’s ebbs and flows\, calls us to pay attention to overlooked lives\, stories\, bodies\, memories\, flows and relations\, to transform materials so that they become reconstituted and are able to hold new and ongoing narratives that refuse to remain silent.”
URL:https://events.ucsc.edu/event/easp-2026/
LOCATION:Mary Porter Sesnon Art Gallery\, Baskin Service Road\, Santa Cruz\, CA\, 95064
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260406T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260406T140000
DTSTAMP:20260426T090820
CREATED:20260302T215318Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260302T215330Z
UID:10009381-1775478600-1775484000@events.ucsc.edu
SUMMARY:Tax Workshops for International Students & Scholars
DESCRIPTION:International Student Services and Programming (ISSP) will be hosting two tax-related sessions for international students and scholars in the coming months\, including a hands-on workshop for anyone who wants support while working through the filing process. We understand that filing taxes can be daunting\, so our office is here to provide resources to make this process easier. \nGLACIER tax prep staff from and graduate peer mentors will be available to help you one-on-one as you complete your tax filing steps. \n\n\nHands-on Tax Workshop #1\nDate: Monday\, March 9\nTime: 12:30 – 14:00\nLocation: Graduate Student Commons (entrance next to Cafe Iveta) \n\n\nWorkshop #2 will take place on Monday\, April 6\, at the same time and location \n\n\nHave any tax questions or topics you’d like us to address at the beginning of each workshop? Submit your questions here\, and we’ll highlight them with the group. Even if you can’t make it to either session\, feel free to still ask us your general questions\, and we’ll update everyone with common themes we’re noticing. \nPlease note that ISSP staff are not tax experts and are legally prohibited from giving you tax advice. It is your responsibility to determine how to file your taxes and/or find a tax preparation service.
URL:https://events.ucsc.edu/event/tax-workshops-for-international-students-scholars/2026-04-06/
LOCATION:Graduate Student Commons\, 420 Hagar Drive\, Santa Cruz\, CA\, 95064
CATEGORIES:Drop-In Support
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260406T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260406T160000
DTSTAMP:20260426T090820
CREATED:20260323T171310Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260323T171429Z
UID:10011351-1775484000-1775491200@events.ucsc.edu
SUMMARY:Film Screening: Sotong and Against this Messy World
DESCRIPTION:On April 6\, 2026\, the Graduate Training in Southeast Asia (GETSEA) consortium and UCSC’s Center for Southeast Asian Coastal Interactions will host two short films highlighting the challenges to art and expression in Malaysia’s complex political\, legal\, and societal landscape. \nSotong follows four fierce local drag queens who were part of the 2022 Halloween party raided by the authorities. One of them\, Juan\, was arrested for ‘a man dressing up as a woman’. Two years later\, they revisit on the fallout of that night as they continue to perform underground and nurture the Malaysian drag scene in all its beauty\, joy\, and pain. \nAgainst This Messy World is a deeply introspective and visually captivating short documentary that delves into the heart and soul of artistic expression in Malaysia. A personal exploration\, narrated by Malaysian artists\, this documentary takes viewers on an evocative journey to understand the essence and purpose of being an artist in a world marked by chaos and uncertainty and piece together conversations and unfiltered moments in their lives. \nUniversities from across North America will come together to watch the films simultaneously\, then connect via Zoom with the filmmakers for a post-screening discussion. Please join us in conversation!
URL:https://events.ucsc.edu/event/film-screening-sotong-and-against-this-messy-world/
LOCATION:Humanities 1 Building\, 257 Cowell-Stevenson Road\, Santa Cruz\, CA\, 95064\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Screening
ORGANIZER;CN="Center for Southeast Asian Social Interactions":MAILTO:seacoast@ucsc.edu
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260406T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260406T160000
DTSTAMP:20260426T090820
CREATED:20260331T233112Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260331T233112Z
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SUMMARY:Book Talk with independent Indian journalist Neha Dixit! The Many Lives of Syeda X: The Story of an Unknown Indian
DESCRIPTION:Save the date! On Monday April 6th\, you are invited to meet with Neha Dixit\, an independent Indian journalist and author based in New Delhi.  \nFrom 2:30-4:00 PM in the Rachel Carson College Red Room\, join the Sociology Department together with the Center for South Asian Studies\, Center for Labor and Community\, and Sikh and Punjabi Studies\, who will hear about Neha’s new book The Many Lives of Syeda X: The Story of an Unknown Indian (Footnote\, 2025). The book would be of interest to urban studies and labor studies scholars\, students and staff as well as\, of course\, those interested in South Asia and the Global South more generally. \nJoin the Sociology Department together with the Center for South Asian Studies\, Center for Labor and Community\, and Sikh and Punjabi Studies\, in the Rachel Carson College Red Room\, who will meet with Neha Dixit\, an independent Indian journalist and author based in New Delhi . We’ll hear about her new book The Many Lives of Syeda X: The Story of an Unknown Indian (Footnote\, 2025). \nAbout The Many Lives of Syeda X: The Story of an Unknown Indian \nWhat does the life of an ordinary working-class Indian look and feel like? In this book\, the award-winning journalist Neha Dixit traces the story of one such faceless Indian woman\, from the early 1990s to the present day. What emerges is a picture of a life lived under constant corrosive tension. Syeda X\, a weaver left Benares for Delhi with her alcoholic husband and three small children in the aftermath of riots triggered by the demolition of the Babri Masjid. In Delhi\, she settled into the life of a poor migrant\, juggling multiple jobs a day — from trimming the loose threads of jeans to cooking namkeen\, and from shelling almonds to making tea strainers. Syeda has done over 50 types of unskilled work in three decades\, earning paltry sums in the process. And if she ever took leave\, to nurse an illness or to attend a school PTA meeting\, her job would be lost to another faceless migrant fighting to take her place.  \nResearched for close to a decade\, in this book\, we meet an unforgettable cast of characters: from a rickshaw driver in Chandni Chowk who ends up tragically dead in a terrorist blast to a slumlord\, who grew ‘too big’ for his own good\, and is shot by rival landlords. From a doctor who gets arrested for pre-natal sex determination to a gow rakshak whose daughter elopes with Syeda’s son. From corrupt policemen who delight in beating young Muslim men to a cheerful band of home-based working women who look out for each other.  \nIn the end\, things come to a grotesque full circle for Syeda. Her life is upturned for the umpteenth time as the Delhi riots of 2020 caused another cataclysmic displacement. But displacement\, tragedy and hardship are something she is used to — being poor and Muslim and a woman. Written with deep insight\, The Many Lives of Syeda X is a portal to a messy world hidden away from elite Indians. It is the story of untold millions and a searing account of urban life in New India.  \nGet Your Copy \nPublished in 2024 by Juggernaut Books in South Asia\, in 2025 by Footnote\, an imprint of Bonner Book UK worldwide excluding North America. The Many Lives of Syeda X: The Story of an Unknown Indian can be purchased from Footnote. \nAbout Neha Dixit \nNeha Dixit is an independent journalist and author based in New Delhi. She has covered politics\, gender\, and social justice for two decades. Most of her work is investigative\, narrative and long-form. She reports for Al Jazeera\, The Washington Post\, Caravan\, The Wire and other notable publications. \nShe has investigated and exposed a wide range of human rights violations including extrajudicial killings by police\, hate crimes\, human trafficking involving Sangh organisations\, clinical trials on the marginalised by big pharma and sectarian majoritarian violence in South Asia. She has also written political profiles and looked at intersections of labour under majoritarian governments. \nShe has won over a dozen international and national journalism awards including the International Press Freedom Award 2019 from the Committee to Protect Journalists\, the Chameli Devi Jain Award for Outstanding Woman Journalist 2017\, Lorenzo Natali Prize for Journalism from the European Commission\, 2011 among others. She has contributed to many non-fiction anthologies. \n‘The Many Lives of Syeda X’ published her debut non-fiction book. It looks at the last 30 years of India through the eyes of a working-class\, migrant Muslim woman in Delhi who becomes a part of the cheap female labour economy and takes up over 50 jobs in three decades without once getting paid a minimum wage. Researched for close to a decade\, it is a portal to a messy world hidden away from elite Indians. It is the story of untold millions and a searing account of urban life in New India.  \nThe book was selected as the book of the year 2024 by The Hindu and Deccan Herald. Neha won the Ramnath Goenka Sahitya Samman award and Kalinga Literary best debut award for this book. The book also received an Honorable Mention by the CG Moore Prize for Human Rights Writing in 2026. \nHonourable Mention by CG Moore Prize for Human Rights Writing\, 2026 \nFaced with a record number of high-quality submissions and a remarkable shortlist\, the Jury would like to recognise another very close contender for the prize. An Honourable Mention goes to The Many Lives of Syeda X by Neha Dixit (Footnote Press\, India)\, an examination of the life of an ordinary\, working-class Muslim woman in modern India. Syeda’s story is told through her 50 different jobs across 30 years of constant corrosive tension. Her many challenges illustrate the universality of the human rights abuses that much of the world’s population face in their daily lives.
URL:https://events.ucsc.edu/event/book-talk-dixit/
LOCATION:Rachel Carson College Red Room
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260406T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260406T170000
DTSTAMP:20260426T090820
CREATED:20260204T222651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260325T181208Z
UID:10009162-1775491200-1775494800@events.ucsc.edu
SUMMARY:AM Seminar: The Thinking Eye: AI That Sees\, Reads\, and Reasons in Medicine
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Yuyin Zhou\, Assistant Professor\, UCSC \nDescription: Medical AI is undergoing a profound transformation\, evolving from simple pattern recognition to systems capable of complex clinical reasoning. This talk will chart this evolution across three dimensions: data\, models\, and evaluation. I will first highlight the shift from limited\, unimodal datasets to massive multimodal resources. In particular\, I will introduce MedTrinity-25M—a novel collection of over 25 million richly annotated medical images that serves as a foundation for multimodal tasks such as visual question answering and report generation. Building on this\, I will describe how grounding decision processes in a structured medical knowledge graph enables the generation of high-fidelity reasoning chains. Using these chains\, we construct a large-scale medical reasoning dataset\, which in turn allows us to develop a new class of reasoning models. These models not only achieve state-of-the-art performance on multiple clinical Q&A benchmarks but also produce reasoning outputs that physicians across seven specialties have independently verified as clinically reliable\, interpretable\, and more factually accurate than existing large language models. Finally\, the talk will offer a deep dive into the critical evaluation of these advanced models\, moving beyond standard benchmarks to expose their current limitations—particularly in interpreting dynamic clinical scenarios such as tracking disease progression from temporal image sequences. To foster a holistic understanding of the mechanisms underlying these reasoning models\, I will introduce a new evaluation framework that examines performance from two complementary perspectives: their grasp of static knowledge versus their capacity for dynamic reasoning. Together\, these advances point toward a future where AI systems can holistically analyze patient information and function as true collaborative partners in complex medical decision-making. \nBio: Yuyin Zhou is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at UC Santa Cruz. Her research interests lie at the intersection of machine learning and computer vision\, with a primary focus on AI for healthcare and scientific discovery. Her work (70+ peered-reviewed publications with18\,000+ citations) has been recognized with honors including 2025 Google Research Scholar Award\, Best Paper Award at KDD 2025 Health Day and at Computerized Medical Imaging and Graphics 2024\, 2023 Hellman Fellowship\, Best Paper Honorable Mention at DART 2022\, and finalist recognition for the MICCAI Young Scientist Publication Impact Award in 2022. Beyond her research\, Yuyin has organized over 20 workshops and tutorials at major conferences including ICML\, MICCAI\, ML4H\, ICCV\, CVPR\, and ECCV\, with coverage in media outlets such as ICCV Daily and Computer Vision News. She serves as a regular Area Chair for CVPR\, ICLR\, MICCAI\, CHIL\, and ISBI\, an associate editor for SPIE medical imaging\, Image and Vision Computing\, and was the Doctoral Consortium Chair for WACV 2025. \nHosted by: Applied Mathematics Department
URL:https://events.ucsc.edu/event/am-seminar-the-thinking-eye-ai-that-sees-reads-and-reasons-in-medicine/
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations,Seminars
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260406T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260406T170000
DTSTAMP:20260426T090820
CREATED:20260318T171956Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260318T171956Z
UID:10011340-1775491200-1775494800@events.ucsc.edu
SUMMARY:Statistics Seminar: Some Recent Results on Transfer Learning
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Oscar Hernan Madrid Padilla\, Assistant Professor\, University of California\, Los Angeles \nDescription: In the first part of the talk\, I will introduce TRansfer leArning via guideD horseshoE prioR (TRADER)\, a novel approach enabling multi-source transfer through pre-trained models in high-dimensional linear regression. TRADER shrinks target parameters towards a weighted average of source estimates\, accommodating sources with different scales. Theoretical investigation shows that TRADER achieves faster posterior contraction rates than standard continuous shrinkage priors when sources align well with the target while preventing negative transfer from heterogeneous sources. Extensive numerical studies and a real-data application demonstrate that TRADER improves estimation and inference accuracy over state-of-the-art transfer learning methods. In the second part of the talk\, I will discuss some ongoing work involving transfer learning in nonparametric regression with ReLU networks \nBio: Oscar Madrid Padilla is a tenure-track Assistant Professor in the Department of Statistics at the University of California\, Los Angeles. Previously\, from July 2017 to June 2019\, he was a Neyman Visiting Assistant Professor in the Department of Statistics at the University of California\, Berkeley. Before that\, he earned his Ph.D. in Statistics from The University of Texas at Austin in May 2017 under the supervision of Professor James Scott. He completed his undergraduate degree\, a B.S. in Mathematics\, at CIMAT in Mexico in April 2013. \nHosted by: Statistics Department 
URL:https://events.ucsc.edu/event/statistics-seminar-some-recent-results-on-transfer-learning/
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations,Seminars
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