Biomedical Engineering Student
Machine Learning
I'm a data scientist at Bizmetriks. I work doing web scraping, data analysis and model preparation.
I've worked at IALAB (Innovation and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory) of the University of Buenos Aires for 7 months. It was an internship. There, I applied Computer Vision techniques, Deep Learning training (YOLO, TensorFlow, cv2), data preparation and NLP techniques.
I am a teaching assistant in the "Artificial Intelligence" class.
I have also taken a number of courses on coursera.org, including “Applied Machine Learning in Python” from the University of Michigan.
I am a student at the National University of Córdoba, where I am studying Biomedical Engineering. The degree lasts 5 years, and I am finishing it. By the way, I'm also studying Computer Science at FAMAF.
I am currently developing the final project: evaluate the latest techniques in Deep Learning for predicting pre-ictal convulsive episodes in EEG, that is, to try to anticipate an epileptic seizure using Machine Learning.
I've been a teaching assistant for two university courses: “Artificial Intelligence” and “C++ programming”, taught for the careers of Computer Engineering, Biomedical Engineering and Electronic Engineering.
I went to the German School of Cordoba and Castelfranco School. At the age of 17, together with the school, I spent a month in the city of Camerino, Italy. A month in Scuola Dante Alighieri, learning with other foreigners the language. There I took and passed an exam of the B1 level of the institution and the international CELI B1 exam.
Within my life I have had contact with different languages, such as German, French, Italian and English, and Spanish of course. I feel good learning the cultures of other people, different verbal structures, and the various ways of expressing ideas.
I enjoy creating, drawing, making videos, writing, and motivating people to learn.
Son of biologists, who always gave me information and constantly encouraged me to seek my own relevant information from times when the expression "google it" did not yet exist.
Since I have memory I feel passion for technology, and I have followed its advances since always. Every thing that today seems commonplace, such as a filter on Instagram capable of tracking faces, surprises me a lot. The small kid inside me, who was excited that WIFI existed and simply found it impossible to believe, today is excited again.