Research
The pioneering U.S. National Science Foundation National AI Institute for Student-AI Teaming (NSF iSAT), led by the ÀÏ¾ÅÆ·²è, launched in 2020 to explore how classrooms could become more effective and engaging learning environments.
In a new study, a team of computer scientists and engineers from the ÀÏ¾ÅÆ·²è created nearly 2,300 original sudoku puzzles, which require players to enter numbers into a grid following certain rules, then asked several AI tools to fill them in.
Ramin Ayanzadeh's research focuses on trustworthy quantum computing to enhance the reliability and security of quantum systems.
Professor Nikolaus Correll and his lab awarded $1.8 million by ARPA-E to research autonomous electric vehicle battery disassembly
Nathaniel Collins (Math'23) received the Outstanding Undergraduate Thesis Award from the Vienna Center for Logic and Algorithms for his work, "Count-Free Weisfeiler–Leman and Group Isomorphism" completed under supervision from Associate Professor Joshua Grochow.
PhD student Katherine Spoon in the Clauset Lab writes for The Conversation on who gets targeted for book bans and how they effect communities.
Codebreaker, from the lab of Ryan Layer, a computer science assistant professor and member of the Biofrontiers Institute, was awarded $125,000 to build a platform for generating variant genomes at scale in an AI framework.
Join us in welcoming our new Department of Computer Science faculty and learn about what they're excited to pursue.
In an opinion piece published by the Association of Computing Machinery, associate professor Daniel Acuna and his co-authors advocate for the wider computer science community to consider who and how they nominate for scientific awards.
Peleg will receive a total of up to $2.5 million over five years to pursue the origins of animal communication and how it influences the group cognition of social animals.