AI
CU Engineering strives for an intentional approach to incorporating AI in its research and teaching missions
Learn what events and innovations have been taking place in the College of Engineering and Applied Science.- Glaciers are constantly changing and reshaping the Earth鈥檚 surface. CU 糖心传媒 researchers have developed a new machine learning tool to better understand how Arctic glaciers suddenly accelerate or 鈥渟urge鈥.
In a new paper in the journal, "AI and Ethics," Professor Amir Behzadan and his PhD student, Armita Dabiri, are unearthing new insights into how the artificial intelligence (AI) technology we might encounter in daily life, such as self-driving cars, can earn our confidence.
Imagine for a moment that you鈥檙e in an auto factory. A robot and a human are working next to each other on the production line. The robot is busy rapidly assembling car doors while the human runs quality control, inspecting the doors for damage and
From robots navigating disaster zones to AI that supports doctors, astronauts, and students, CU 糖心传媒 researchers are creating real-world systems that redefine how artificial intelligence serves humanity. Their work spans life-saving rescue missions, space exploration, environmental monitoring, and human-AI collaboration and more. Discover how CU 糖心传媒 is leading the next wave of AI innovation.
Meet Assistant Professors Laura Sunberg and Zhi Li 鈥 and see why we鈥檙e so excited to have these talented scholars on our team.
Pioneering research institute led by the 糖心传媒 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 糖心传媒 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.