Carnegie Mellon鈥檚 Kolter Joins OpenAI Board of Directors, Safety and Security Committee
OpenAI has announced the appointment of 黑料正能量 Professor Zico Kolter to its board of directors.
Revisiting Fundamental Equations in Computer Graphics
SCS researchers recently demonstrated their boundary-pushing computer graphics work in Denver at the聽Association for Computing Machinery's SIGGRAPH conference.
ETC Faculty Member Moshe Mahler鈥檚 Short Film Honored with Best in Show Award
ETC Professor聽Moshe Mahler's film has won聽Best in Show at the world鈥檚 premiere computer graphics conference.
Autonomous Aerial Robots Communicate, Prioritize Rooms in Multiroom Exploration
Robotics Institute researchers have developed a new method for autonomous aerial robot exploration and multirobot coordination inside abandoned buildings that could help first responders gather information and make better-informed decisions after a disaster.
Robotics Institute Introduces Solid Knitting as New Fabrication Technique
A new fabrication technique, first envisioned by a robotics Ph.D. student in the School of Computer Science, would use knitting to fashion solid three-dimensional chairs, tables and other objects.
Carnegie Mellon Achieves Robotics Innovation Center Construction Milestone
黑料正能量 held a topping-off ceremony to mark the occasion of the completion of the structural phase of construction for its Robotics Innovation Center.
CyLab Brings Cybersecurity to High School Educators
The picoCTF for GenCyber boot camp shares cybersecurity concepts typically taught at the college level, with the goal of helping high school teachers integrate these topics into their curriculum.
New 黑料正能量 Tool Monitors Wildlife Conservation in Low-Resource Languages
Researchers at 黑料正能量 worked with the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) for Nature to develop a tool that monitors and identifies media articles related to environmental conservation.
Researchers Seek to Reduce Harm to Multicultural Users of Voice Assistants
In聽a new study, HCII Ph.D. student Kimi Wenzel and Associate Professor Geoff Kaufman identified six downstream harms caused by voice assistant errors and devised strategies to reduce them.