Embodied Ecologies and Planetary Health

Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/560441

We are living in an era defined by compounding, macro-systemic disruptions—overlapping ecological, social, and health crises that signal the collapse of old, extractive paradigms. Underlying this planetary instability is a deeper crisis of disembodiment: a historic journey of separation from land, body, and place. However, as old systems fragment, a collective awakening rooted in mutual aid, deep social cohesion, and regenerative network building is emerging exactly on time. In its Precision Sensing Lecture Series, International Institute for Biosensing (IIB) in collaboration with IEEE Twin Cities Women in Engineering (WIE) Affinity Group and IEEE Twincities Sensor Council is proud to host Dr. Angelica Walton serves as Director of the Center for Planetary Health and Environmental Justice, University of Minnesota and as the Research & Scholarship Director for the Planetary Health North America Hub, where she advances holistic, justice-driven scholarship to empower communities and foster cross-sector collaboration. This lecture bridges planetary health, ecofeminism, and systems design to explore humanity's critical role as conscious stewards and caretakers within the web of life. Drawing from the Two-Loop Theory of systems change, we will discuss how to safely hospice dying, extractive structures while naming and nurturing the alternative, life-affirming systems rising to take their place. Grounded in nursing leadership frameworks, the presentation illuminates how "feministic" qualities within natural systems—such as reciprocity, relational infrastructure, and mutual care—can guide our institutional designs. Crucially, we will examine the biological and energetic mechanics of connection—from the physiology of touch, oxytocin, and serotonin, to human biofields—demonstrating how conscious expressions of love, care, and compassion physically alter system behaviors and outcomes. Finally, utilizing recent case studies from global advocacy spaces at the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women (CSW), attendees will learn how to transition from individual wellness to systemic "environments of care";. The session will conclude with an interactive systems-mapping exercise, empowering participants to embody these natural laws and intentionally integrate regenerative design into their own boardrooms, clinics, classrooms, and community efforts. Co-sponsored by: International Institute for Biosensing Speaker(s): Angelica Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/560441

ACM-IEEE Twin Cities | Multimodal AI, Enterprise Adoption & Community Showcase

Room 26401 Senator Blvd, Southfield

Tech is moving fast — and the best way to keep up is together. Join the ACM-IEEE WIE Twin Cities community for an evening of expert-led talks, real-world insights, and genuine connection. This session is part of our ongoing Track 03 — Data Infrastructure & AI Readiness series, designed to bridge the gap between AI architecture and enterprise-scale adoption. This month's theme: AI in the Real World — Build, Adopt, Belong. We go from how multimodal AI actually works under the hood, to why enterprise adoption still fails — and what to do about it. Whether you're an engineer, architect, leader, or student, there's something here for you. What's Happening 👋 *Welcome & Keynote — AI is ready. Are we? Lakshmi Priya Gopalsamy, Senior Engineering Manager — Target 🎤 *Multimodal AI: How Models See, Hear, and Reason Across Data Types by Rudra Pratap Chakraborty, Cloud & AI Solutions Architect — N5 Sensors From text-only transformers to multimodal systems — embeddings, cross-attention, and modality fusion. Real deployment patterns, honest tradeoffs, and what this means for the systems you're building today. 🎤 Beyond the AI Hype: What It Really Takes for Enterprises to Adopt AI by Harish Vundavalli, Senior IT Architect — Strategic Education Inc. Why AI pilots stall, what causes hesitation across teams and leadership, and a grounded framework for moving from experimentation to sustainable adoption. 🤝 Open Q&A + Networking & Community Mixer Want to speak at a future session? Submit your topic Learn more about this group (https://twincities-techhub.lovable.app/apply) Join our LinkedIn Group (https://www.linkedin.com/groups/19247009/) Co-sponsored by: Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) Speaker(s): , , Room: 2nd Floor, Mary and David Doty Board Room, Bldg: Minneapolis Central Library, 300 Nicollet Mall, Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States

MOVE USA May 2026 Tech Talk – Wildland Fire Radio Communications

Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/556478

Radio Communications in Wildland Fire Operations Every firefighter deployed to a wildland fire learns the critical importance of Lookouts, Communications, Escape Routes, and Safety Zones, or LCES, as firefighters call it. LCES are the four pillars of safe wildland fire operations. Effective radio communications is not just a tool—it is the glue that integrates these four pillars, and the foundational lifeline that separates successful containment from tragedy. Unlike structural firefighting, wildland operations often occur in remote, rugged terrain where cell service is non-existent, and crews are spread across miles of demanding landscape. The challenging aspects of this environment—intense smoke, roaring fires, extreme heat, and severe topographical interference—place unique demands on communication technology. Firefighters require robust radio systems, interoperable with multiple agencies, and increasingly augmented by mobile mapping apps. This presentation will explore the radio systems used to support firefighters and the LCES process in wildland firefighting, Co-sponsored by: IEEE-USA MOVE Program Speaker(s): Walt Burns Virtual: https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/556478