20 DAILY ICCV by working on healthcare. At that point, I transitioned into industry. I did a fellowship, a short one just to gain some experience and some network. Then I started my first role in the industry at what now is called IQVIA, a healthcare company. Back then, there was no image involved. They work on electronic health records, predicting rare diseases in patients. Tell me, do you still busy yourself sometimes with astrophysics things or that's a close chapter? It's not completely a close chapter, I would say. I like the interdisciplinary part a lot. I think when you know about multiple fields, there are a lot of opportunity to cross-pollinate ideas or things. It's not a completely close one. When I was still at IQVIA, I started a collaboration with NASA. I spent some months there working on AI for satellite instruments. Both applied for astrophysics mission like solar missions, both health observation mission. For example, there are a lot of similarities between images from health observation satellites and images that come from computational pathology. They're like from a computational computer vision perspective. There are a lot of similarities and common technologies that are used. I still did that for a few years. It was a side job as consultant and I love it. But at this point, I already have a second job as a parent, so I just feel there was no time for a third one. With all the work that you are doing and with a daughter to take care of and living abroad. There is a lot on your plate. How do you make sure that passion will be there until the day you retire? I think it's just a matter of balance. Not every day of your career will be interesting, but it's a long journey. I think you need to keep challenging yourself or finding interesting problems to work on or interesting people to work with and be curious of. This might be personal, but at least for me, I find very refreshing on a regular basis to learn something Tuesday Women in Computer Vision
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