
Latest News

Measuring Internet resilience in Ukraine
Tuesday, November 1, 2022When Carnegie Mellon master’s students Akshath Jain, Deepayan Patra, and Mike Xu reached out to Department of Computer Science associate professor Justine Sherry, asking to take her doctoral level “Computer Networks” course, they never imagined they would end up presenting their course project at the ACM Internet Measurement Conference (IMC) in France.
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Pawn to Queen Four: CMU Celebrates 50 Years of Speech Research
Aaron Aupperleeby Aaron Aupperlee | Friday, October 28, 2022
Talking to computers is the norm these days, from digital assistants in smartphones and smart devices to translation applications that break down language barriers. But 50 years ago, when Carnegie Mellon University began its work in speech understanding, all that was a pipe dream.
The university recently gathered to celebrate five decades of research that enables people to talk to computers and — more importantly — computers to understand their speech at the P2Q4 Symposium.
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Visualization Tool Helps Law Enforcement Identify Human Trafficking
Aaron Aupperleeby Aaron Aupperlee | Tuesday, October 25, 2022
A data visualization tool developed by School of Computer Science researchers, collaborators from other universities and experts in the field could assist law enforcement agencies working to combat human trafficking by identifying patterns in online escort advertisements that often indicate illegal activity.
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Award-winning research paves the way for provably-safe sandboxing using WebAssembly
Tuesday, October 11, 2022"This is code downloaded from the internet. Are you sure you want to run it?"
In today's computer programming landscape, developers often face the challenge of safely using untrusted code. Libraries and frameworks, for example, help coders skip large amounts of tedious and duplicative work, but using code from unverified sources can become hazardous without the right safeguards in place.
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Carnegie Mellon's hacking team wins DEF CON CTF
Thursday, August 18, 2022Carnegie Mellon showed off its computer security talent by winning DEF CON's Capture the Flag competition, the “Superbowl of hacking,” for the sixth time. The team was composed of CMU students in the Plaid Parliament of Pwning, who joined forces with CMU Alum Professor Robert Xiao’s Maple Bacon (at the University of British Columbia) and CMU Alum startup Theori.io.
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SCS Faculty Receive More Than $1.6M in NSF CAREER Awards
Full Stack Engineer - Technology for Effective and Efficient Learning (TEEL) Labby Full Stack Engineer - Technology for Effective and Efficient Learning (TEEL) Lab | Tuesday, July 26, 2022
Three Carnegie Mellon University researchers in the School of Computer Science recently earned Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER) awards from the National Science Foundation. The awards are the foundation's most prestigious for young faculty researchers.
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Researchers propose ephemeral approach to IoT privacy
Josh Quicksallby Josh Quicksall | Wednesday, July 6, 2022
Whether you are at the office, the gym, or even at a friend’s house for a BBQ this summer, chances are an IoT device is going to gather some sort of data about you. Compounding the fact that this data may be sensitive is the reality that many of these devices gather data on anyone within range, whether they are the owners of the device or not.
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Optical Microphone Developed by CMU Researchers Sees Sound Like Never Before
Dual-Shutter Vibration-Sensing System Uses Ordinary Cameras To Achieve Extraordinary Results
Aaron Aupperleeby Aaron Aupperlee | Tuesday, June 21, 2022
A camera system developed by Carnegie Mellon University researchers can see sound vibrations with such precision and detail that it can reconstruct the music of a single instrument in a band or orchestra.
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SCS Alum Named to Time Magazine's List of 100 Most Influential People
Full Stack Engineer - Technology for Effective and Efficient Learning (TEEL) Labby Full Stack Engineer - Technology for Effective and Efficient Learning (TEEL) Lab | Friday, June 3, 2022
Genomics expert and School of Computer Science alumnus Michael Schatz was named to Time Magazine's 2022 list of the 100 most influential people for his work to fill in the gaps of the human genome sequence with the Telomere-to-Telomere Consortium (T2T).
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Platzer Selected for Alexander von Humboldt Professorship for Artificial Intelligence
SCS Professor Will Head Institute for the Reliability of Autonomous Dynamical Systems at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Aaron Aupperleeby Aaron Aupperlee | Wednesday, June 1, 2022
Computer systems increasingly manage and control networks such as the trains crisscrossing a country or the planes taking off and landing at an airport. Failures in these systems not only disrupt critical infrastructure but can also put people's lives at risk.
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A theory of consciousness from a theoretical computer science perspective: Insights from the Conscious Turing Machine (CTM)
Murdoch Building, Classroom 814 and Zoomby Murdoch Building, Classroom 814 and Zoom | Friday, May 27, 2022
The quest to understand consciousness, once the purview of philosophers and theologians, is now actively pursued by scientists of many stripes. This paper studies consciousness from the perspective of Theoretical Computer Science (TCS), a branch of mathematics concerned with understanding the underlying principles of computation and complexity.
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Baharav Awarded CMWA Scholarship
Aaron Aupperleeby Aaron Aupperlee | Thursday, May 12, 2022
The Carnegie Mellon Women's Association (CMWA) has awarded Carmel Baharav, a senior graduating with a degree in computer science, a $1,500 scholarship as one of its 2022 award recipients.
Baharav was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma, Society of Women Engineers and the Db choir. She was also a teacher's assistant, which she called one of the most impactful experiences she had at CMU.
"I have gotten to know so many students and hopefully have been able to help some of them," Baharav said.
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SCS Seniors Shine as Scholar Athletes
ASA Conference Room, Gates Hillman 6115 and Zoomby ASA Conference Room, Gates Hillman 6115 and Zoom | Thursday, May 12, 2022
Nadia Susanto and Michael OBroin will both earn degrees from the School of Computer Science during Carnegie Mellon University's upcoming Commencement exercises on Sunday, May 15. But they'll also leave the university with something not every student can claim: top-notch records as athletes.
Nadia Susanto
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SCS Ph.D. Students Designed, Taught New Course To Make Computer Science More Welcoming, Inclusive
Aaron Aupperleeby Aaron Aupperlee | Wednesday, April 27, 2022
The Computer Science Department's new course focusing on issues of justice, equity, diversity and inclusion in computer science and society got its start when a group of graduate students decided to create the training they wished they had received.
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NSF Awards CMU Researchers $3M To Accelerate Next-Gen Networking, Computing
Aaron Aupperleeby Aaron Aupperlee | Tuesday, April 19, 2022
Carnegie Mellon Researchers in the School of Computer Science and College of Engineering will use nearly $3 million in funding from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to help develop intelligent, resilient and reliable next-generation (NextG) networks.
The NSF awarded $37 million to 37 different projects at universities across the country.
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Your Eyes Control Your Smartphone With CMU's New Gaze-Tracking Tool
EyeMU Enables Users To Interact With Their Screens Without Lifting a Finger
Blelloch-Skees Conference Room, Gates Hillman 8115 and Zoomby Blelloch-Skees Conference Room, Gates Hillman 8115 and Zoom | Monday, April 18, 2022
As more people watch movies, edit video, read the news and keep up with social media on their smartphones, these devices have grown to accommodate the bigger screens and higher processing power needed for more demanding activities.
The problem with unwieldy phones is they frequently require a second hand or voice commands to operate — which can be cumbersome and inconvenient.
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Pair of SCS Faculty Named Science Talent Search Notable Alumni
Aaron Aupperleeby Aaron Aupperlee | Thursday, March 31, 2022
The Society for Science included renowned Carnegie Mellon University computer scientists Mary Shaw and Dana Scott in its recent list of notable alumni from the Science Talent Search program.
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SCS Ph.D. Students Selected for Amazon Graduate Research Fellowship
Aaron Aupperleeby Aaron Aupperlee | Wednesday, March 23, 2022
Amazon awarded its second round of research fellowships to five graduate students with ties to the School of Computer Science. They include Emily Black, Saurabh Garg, Natalia Lombardi de Oliveira, Emre Yolcu and Minji Yoon.
The program supports graduate students researching automated reasoning, computer vision, robotics, language technology, machine learning, operations research and data science. The students will be invited to interview for a science internship at Amazon.
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Raj Reddy To Receive Honorary Degree at CMU Commencement
Aaron Aupperleeby Aaron Aupperlee | Tuesday, March 22, 2022
Raj Reddy, a pioneer in robotics, artificial intelligence and speech recognition, will receive an honorary degree during Carnegie Mellon University's 2022 Commencement ceremonies in May.
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SCS Alumna Parlays Programming Into Publishing
Susie Cribbsby Susie Cribbs | Thursday, March 17, 2022
Any Carnegie Mellon University grad who reads Sindya Bhanoo's short story, "His Holiness," will know she has a CMU connection the instant they see the line, "It will take time, but my heart is in this work." What might be more surprising is that Bhanoo, who just published her first collection of short fiction, "Seeking Fortune Elsewhere," majored in computer science.
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Former CMU Computer Science Professor, Turing Winner Honored With Dickson Prize in Science
Aaron Aupperleeby Aaron Aupperlee | Thursday, March 3, 2022
At a time when researchers had abandoned neural networks as a tool for achieving deep learning, Geoffrey Hinton persisted.
His work on deep learning has spanned decades and eventually led to the technology enabling a smartphone to translate foreign languages in near-real time.
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Reinforcement Learning Bolsters Automated Detection of Concrete Cracks
Method Could Enable Autonomous Drones To Monitor Safety of Bridges
Byron Spiceby Byron Spice | Tuesday, March 1, 2022
Rust never sleeps, and cracking concrete doesn't get a day off either.
The Jan. 28 collapse of Pittsburgh's Fern Hollow Bridge was a dramatic reminder of that fact. The exact cause of the collapse won't be known until the National Transportation Safety Board completes a months-long study, but Carnegie Mellon University researchers have developed autonomous drone technology that someday might prevent similar catastrophes and lesser mishaps caused by deterioration.
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Expert in Ethics and AI Joins CMU Faculty This Fall
School Will Receive $3.5 Million To Support Work
Aaron Aupperleeby Aaron Aupperlee | Thursday, February 24, 2022
Vincent Conitzer expects much to be the same when he returns to Carnegie Mellon University this coming fall.
It will still be the best place in the world for computer science and the technical expertise will still be unmatched. Many of the colleagues, professors and even his Ph.D. advisor will also still be around.
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Manuela Veloso Elected to National Academy of Engineering
Aaron Aupperleeby Aaron Aupperlee | Thursday, February 17, 2022
Manuela Veloso, head of JPMorgan Chase AI Research and the Herbert A. Simon University Professor Emeritus in Carnegie Mellon University's School of Computer Science, was elected as a 2022 member of the National Academy of Engineering for her contributions to machine learning and its applications in robotics and the financial services industry.
The honor is among the highest professional distinctions bestowed on engineers.
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CyLab faculty named Intel’s 2021 Outstanding Researchers
Daniel Tkacikby Daniel Tkacik | Tuesday, February 15, 2022
CyLab faculty Justine Sherry, Vyas Sekar, and James Hoe have been selected among the winners of Intel’s 2021 Outstanding Researcher Award for their collaborati
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