The University of Maryland’s Cyber-Physical Systems Engineering (CPSE) program at the Universities at Shady Grove (USG) held its second annual Demo Day on Friday, August 16, 2024. The student demo portion of the event took place in the lobby of the Biomedical Sciences and Engineering Building, while the formal program was held in the Basement Theater below. Dr. Bill Phillips, the 1997 Nobel Prize winner in Physics, served as the event’s guest of honor and keynote speaker. Dr. Phillips’ riveting presentation was about the revolutionary quantum reform of the modern metric system.

The eight student groups and their projects were as follows:
- AquaSmart – A self-sustaining smart aquarium that automates maintenance through remote monitoring and control, providing real-time data to users.
- Ryan Collingham – App Fullstack Developer
- Gautam Tangirala – Embedded Systems Engineer & Database Developer
- Zachary Hon – Embedded Systems Engineer & Frontend Developer
- James Hui – Hardware & Model Engineer
- BallBuddy – An autonomous tennis ball-collecting robot.
- Marko Peric – Project Leader & Software
- Jesse Iobst – CAD & Hardware
- Magic Gambit – A computer vision system enabling humans to play against a computer on a physical chessboard.
- Michael Habib – Project Leader, Software & Electronics
- Alexander Angeloff – Software & Hardware
- Nima Sichani – Software, CAD & Hardware
- Mason Boucher – Software, Computer Vision & GUI
- PillPal – An automated pill dispenser that simplifies medication management.
- Lauren Chin – Project Leader
- Saron Yohannes – Software
- Anisha Rajapakse – CAD & Hardware
- Smrithi Karthik – CAD & Hardware
- SafeCycle – An intelligent turn signal device designed to enhance biker safety.
- Daniel Skendaj – Project Leader & Software
- Miles Riley – Electrical & Hardware
- Nishanth Sasikumar – Design
- SignScribe – A robotic hand that translates speech into sign language in real time.
- Allison Andreyev – Project Leader & Software
- Sakib Niaz – Software & GUI
- Yenni Do – Hardware & CAD Prototype
- Elliott Owens – Computer Engineer
- Sky Swift Deliveries – An autonomous drone delivery system ensuring safe and reliable package transport.
- Kristoffer Velas – Project Leader & Software
- Raunak Maheshwari – Software
- Gustavo Castro Orozco – Hardware & PR
- Toyin Okunseinde – Hardware & Electronics
- Ved Shewani – CAD & Hardware
- SurroundSense – A wearable device providing real-time spatial awareness and obstacle detection for the blind and visually impaired.
- Charlie Holden – Project Leader
- Mark Philip – Software

CPSE Demo Day is an excellent example of the pathway building by industry sector that connects high school and community college students to programs at USG for transfer. The collaboration with industry and academia provides relationship building, competitive learning, and excitement and information surrounding programs and their career pathways. USG hubs plan to expand summer programming to build more of these pathway opportunities.

Brian Schoem, CPSE Program Coordinator, kicked off Demo Day’s formal program with introductions, followed by welcoming remarks from Dr. Anne Khademian, Executive Director of USG, and Dr. Romel Gomez, CPSE Program Director.
Dr. Gomez articulated the goal of the summer program and the CPSE program as a whole. He detailed the forward-looking nature of Cyber-Physical Systems Engineering and modern developments throughout the Internet of Things (IoT) and embedded systems. Dr. Gomez highlighted that the systems facilitating the tech sector and our society right now—artificial intelligence, data, machine learning—all fall under the umbrella of cyber-physical systems. Thus, the CPSE program, “prepares students with the competency skills to thrive in current and future workplace demands,” he remarked.
The formal program also included a keynote address from Dr. Bill Phillips on “Quantum Reforms of the Modern Metric System,” followed by a Q&A session, during which Dr. Phillips awarded prizes to participating audience members. Dr. Phillips, a Nobel Prize recipient, is a fellow at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), where he is part of a Laser Cooling and Trapping Group.

Dr. Phillips began by giving a brief history of the metric system and time. He discussed how we transitioned from measuring time by using the Earth’s rotation to defining a second using the frequency of a cesium atom. Dr. Phillips also described the mechanics of an atomic clock and explained how his and others work in laser cooling helped improve the performance of cesium clocks, making them more precise and accurate. In terms of measuring space (metric system), after the invention of lasers in 1960, the speed of light became the standard for defining a meter. Ultimately, the new definition was able to account for future improvements in lasers and frequency measurements.
After the keynote, Dr. Nestor Tiglao, CPSE Professor and Summer Program Chief Innovation Architect, introduced the student teams. Each group took the stage to explain their concepts and demonstrate their prototypes.

The teams were evaluated by three judges—Tom Clifford, Program Director, Business Partnerships at USG; Michelle Marcellino, Director of UMD Programs at USG; and Michael Keeney, USG Chief Financial Officer—on the following criteria:
- Clarity in articulating the problem
- Product design
- Market validation
- Quality of project demo and poster
- Final pitch presentation

At the end of the pitch presentations, the SignScribe team—Allison Andreyev (project leader & software engineer), Sakib Niaz (hardware & GUI engineer), Yenni Do (software & CAD prototyping engineer), and Elliott Owens (computer engineer)—was awarded the 2024 “Best Team Award” for their innovative robotic hand, which can process live speech and output the equivalent spelling in American Sign Language (ASL).


Photos from the event can be found on: CPSE’s Flickr page and USG’s Flickr page.
Check out the Summer Program’s promo video for CPSE’s 2024 Demo Day below:
https://youtu.be/ZgFJxupFYzQ?si=j15XaAto-hs_6Flq
You can also follow the Cyber-Physical Systems Engineering (CPSE) program at USG on Instagram, Linkedin, Twitter/X, YouTube, Flickr, or Facebook.