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Larissa Suzuki, also known as Lara Suzuki, is a Brazilian-Italian-British University Professor,[1] computer scientist, former CEO, angel investor, Government Advisor, chartered engineer, inventor,[2] scientist,[3] author and entrepreneur.[4][5] She is also a pianist and violinist.[citation needed]
Larissa (Lara) Suzuki | |
---|---|
Born | Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo, Brazil |
Nationality | Brazilian-Italian-British |
Alma mater | University College London (PhD) |
Known for | Smart Cities, AI, Interplanetary Internet, Federated Learning, Neurodiversity |
Awards |
|
Scientific career | |
Fields | |
Institutions | |
Thesis | Data as Infrastructure for Smart Cities (2015) |
Doctoral advisor | Anthony Finkelstein |
Website | larissasuzuki |
Suzuki works at Google as a Technical Director [6] in the Google's Office of the CTO bringing technical expertise in the advancements and future of Artificial Intelligence. She is a Visiting Researcher at NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory working on building the Interplanetary Internet working with Vint Cerf. Her continuing academic work is as a professor at University College London and University of Quebec, and as a lecturer at Oxford University and Harvard University.
Early life and education
editSuzuki grew up in Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo to a family of engineers, scientists and academics. At the age of 15 she went to the Universidade de Ribeirão Preto to pursue a career in music. After one year of studies she dropped from the course and went on pursuing a degree in Computer Science. Suzuki was honoured by the Brazilian Computer Society as the best student of her class.[7] Suzuki started a MPhil degree in Electrical Engineering at the Universidade de São Paulo in the city of Sao Carlos. Her MPhil thesis created new technologies for early detection of breast cancer in women of all ages, and have paved the way to reduce radiation exposure in cancer patients by 20% – 30%.[8] In 2015, Suzuki earned a PhD in Computer Science from University College London in a joint program with Imperial College Business School and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for her research on smart cities [9] supervised by Anthony Finkelstein.
Career
editSuzuki is based at Google working as a member of the Office of the CTO, is also a Google AI Principles Ethics Fellow, and is a Visiting Researcher at Nasa Jet Propulsion Laboratory. She was part of the team who made the historical feat connecting clouds with Delay-tolerant networking.[10] Her continuing academic work is at UCL where she serves as an Honorary Associate Professor in Computer Science. She was previously the UK Head of AI, Analytics and Data Management for Google, was a Director of Product Management at Oracle, and held appointments at Arup Group, City Hall, London, IBM. She served as Head of Data Science for Founders4Schools and is on its Technical Advisory Board of Workfinder supporting Sherry Coutu with the organisation's technical endeavours in Machine Learning and AI.
Suzuki's PhD thesis pioneered Data Infrastructures for Smart Cities, and she created the City Data Market Strategy of the Mayor of London,[11] and her work was used to design Urban Platforms for over 40 European cities.[12]
In 2012 Suzuki founded the UCL Society of Women Engineers and co-founded the Anita Borg Institute London Branch. She chairs the Tech London Advocates group on Smart Cities, and is a reviewer of grant/awards of the Royal Academy of Engineering, the Institution of Engineering and Technology, and served as a judge of the Association for Computing Machinery Global Student Research Competition. She currently serves as a DEI Committee Member of the Royal Academy of Engineering,[13] is a Council Member of the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering Ambassadors,[14] and is a Member of the Search Committee of the QEPrize for Engineering.[15]
Honours and awards
editSuzuki is an EUR ING, a Fellow of the Institute of Engineering and Technology, the Royal Society of Arts, and is a Companion (Fellow level) of the Royal Aeronautical Society. In 2022 she was elected the Top 50 Women in European Tech,[16] has been featured in the Financial Times,[17] and was the Woman of the Year by the Women in IT Awards.[18] In 2021, she received the Engineer of the Year Award from "Engineering Talent Awards", in partnership with the Royal Academy of Engineering and sponsored by McLaren Racing.[19] Her contributions to science and engineering has also been included in the Institute of Engineering and Technology "95 inspiring engineers and technologist of the past, present, and future".[20]
She also received the "Rooke Award 2021" from the Royal Academy of Engineering for her work promoting engineering, and for developing the Interplanetary Internet and smart cities.[21] In the same year she also received the Inspiring Fifty UK award [22] and was featured in the Financial Times. She holds the Freedom of the City of London and is a Freeman at the Worshipful Company of Engineers. In 2012 she was awarded the Google Anita Borg Scholarship (now known as Women Techmakers Scholarship).[23] Other notable awards include Winner of Twenty in Data 2020, the WES Young Woman Engineer of the Year Awards 2017 (Women's Engineering Society),[24] Recipient of the Romberg Grant (Heidelberg Laureate Foundation), 100 Next Generation of Women Leaders (McKinsey), Doctoral Student Honour Fellowship 2013–2014 (Intel) and the 2013 Architecture and Engineering Prize of the British Federation of Women Graduates.[25]
References
edit- ^ "Larissa Suzuki". 21 August 2018.
- ^ "US20160065554A1 Patent".
- ^ "Google Scholar Citation".
- ^ Lacey, Hester (16 October 2021). "Larissa Suzuki: Which object do I wish I still had? My Tamagotchi from the 1990s". Financial Times.
- ^ "ComputerWeekly Most Influential Women in Tech List 2022". /www.computerweekly.com.
- ^ "How seeking inclusion in tech led Lara to Google". 14 October 2022.
- ^ "Aluno Destaque 2007 (Portuguese)". www.sbc.org.br.
- ^ Romualdo, Larissa C. S.; Vieira, Marcelo A. C.; Schiabel, Homero; Mascarenhas, Nelson D. A.; Borges, Lucas R. (2013). "Mammographic Image Denoising and Enhancement Using the Anscombe Transformation, Adaptive Wiener Filtering, and the Modulation Transfer Function". Journal of Digital Imaging. 26 (2). link.springer.com: 183–197. doi:10.1007/s10278-012-9507-1. PMC 3597965. PMID 22806627.
- ^ Dr Larissa Suzuki PhD Thesis (Doctoral). discovery.ucl.ac.uk. 28 March 2016.
- ^ "Historical feat connecting clouds with DTN". ipnsig.org. Archived from the original on 27 September 2021.
- ^ "Data for London: A city data strategy". data.london.gov.uk.
- ^ "EIP Urban Platform Requirements" (PDF). eu-smartcities.eu.
- ^ "Royal Academy of Engineering DEI Committee".
- ^ "Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering Ambassador Council".
- ^ "Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering Search Committee".
- ^ "The Top Fifty Women in European Tech".
- ^ Lacey, Hester (16 October 2021). "Larissa Suzuki: 'Which object do I wish I still had? My Tamagotchi from the 1990s'". Financial Times.
- ^ "Women in IT Awards".
- ^ "Engineering Talent Awards". engineeringtalentawards.com.
- ^ "Celebrating the impact of inspiring engineers and technologists from the world of STEM".
- ^ "Interplanetary Internet Developer and Tech Entrepreneur receives the Rooke Award".
- ^ "Inspiring Fifty 2021". accelerateher.co.
- ^ "CS Research Student wins Google Scholarship". www.cs.ucl.ac.uk.
- ^ "Larissa Suzuki".
- ^ "BFWG Awards". 11 October 2012.