From clipboards to keyboards
There’s a turntable in the University of ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV’s TerraByte lab, but it’s for scanning plants, not spinning records.
“You put the plant on the turntable and the plant rotates and you take pictures from four different camera angles and then you can build up 3D models,” explained, Professor Bidinosti, in the Physics Department and co-founder of the lab, an interdisciplinary hub for research exploring machine learning applications in agriculture.
Located at the intersection of physics, computer science, biology, and engineering, TerraByte is and is also one of ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV’s most successful research programs to date, attracting nearly $5 million in external funding since 2018.
Click to read the full article.