Difference between revisions of "User:Makotomai"

From PrattWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
 
(4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
==About Me==
 
==About Me==
 
I am a freshman at Duke University in Pratt that is planning on majoring in Biomedical Engineering. I went to Vernon Hills High School, which is approximately 50 minutes north of Chicago, Illinois.
 
I am a freshman at Duke University in Pratt that is planning on majoring in Biomedical Engineering. I went to Vernon Hills High School, which is approximately 50 minutes north of Chicago, Illinois.
 +
 +
==Name Pronunciation==
 +
My last name is Thai, but the pronunciation is not at all like how it's spelled. My first name is pretty simple, Mi-KAY-la, and my last name is pronounced Khun-WAH-rah-non in which the khun is like the second syllable of cocoon.
 +
 +
==[[Grand Challenges for Engineering]] Article==
 +
[http://www.nationaldefensemagazine.org/archive/2009/March/Pages/ReverseEngineeringtheBrainMayAccelerateRoboticsResearch.aspx|Reverse Engineering the Brain May Accelerate Robotics Research], Stew Magnuson, NDIA, published March 2009, accessed 14 September 2014
 +
 +
==MATLAB Demonstration==
 +
My favorite demonstration on MATLAB is the 2D and 3D Plots in the graphics section. The power of MATLAB to plot the points and make regression lines with such ease in comparison to doing them by hand makes it so interesting.

Latest revision as of 03:48, 15 September 2014

About Me

I am a freshman at Duke University in Pratt that is planning on majoring in Biomedical Engineering. I went to Vernon Hills High School, which is approximately 50 minutes north of Chicago, Illinois.

Name Pronunciation

My last name is Thai, but the pronunciation is not at all like how it's spelled. My first name is pretty simple, Mi-KAY-la, and my last name is pronounced Khun-WAH-rah-non in which the khun is like the second syllable of cocoon.

Grand Challenges for Engineering Article

Engineering the Brain May Accelerate Robotics Research, Stew Magnuson, NDIA, published March 2009, accessed 14 September 2014

MATLAB Demonstration

My favorite demonstration on MATLAB is the 2D and 3D Plots in the graphics section. The power of MATLAB to plot the points and make regression lines with such ease in comparison to doing them by hand makes it so interesting.