
Columbia Engineers Use Psychology, Physics, and Geometry to Make Robots More Intelligent
Columbia computer scientists work with the Toyota Research Institute to make advanced home robots a reality.
Columbia computer scientists work with the Toyota Research Institute to make advanced home robots a reality.
PhD student Tuhin Chakrabarty talks about how his research is tapping into the creative side of computer science. The … Continue reading Voices of CS: Tuhin Chakrabarty
Dan Rubenstein explains how Netflix’s plan to curb password sharing will work. Just a couple of years ago, Netflix declared, … Continue reading Netflix’s Password-Sharing Crackdown
Ronghui Gu is recognized for fundamental theory underlying systems verification and for synthesizing the results into realistic bug-free and hacker-resistant systems software.
Jim Kurose (PhD ’84) chats with PhD student Casper Lant about networks and IoTS for Wired magazine.
Computer Scientist honored for his pioneering research in imaging.
Papers from CS researchers were accepted to the Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP) 2022. EMNLP is a leading … Continue reading 12 Research Papers Accepted to EMNLP 2022
Researchers from the department presented machine learning and artificial intelligence research at the thirty-fifth Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems … Continue reading 11 Papers Accepted to NeurIPS 2022
Professor Steven Bellovin remembers his mentor Frederick P. Brooks, Jr., in a blog post about the computer scientist and author of The Mythical Man-Month.
Computer scientist honored for his pioneering research in imaging and vision.
The 1st-year PhD student talks about the Pre-submission Application Review program and how it helped him finetune his application. … Continue reading Voices of CS: Tao Long
Professor Kathleen R. McKeown is the recipient of the 2023 IEEE Innovation in Societal Infrastructure Award—the highest award recognizing significant technological achievements and contributions to the establishment, development, and proliferation of innovative societal infrastructure systems … Continue reading Top 2023 IEEE Innovation In Societal Infrastructure Awardee Kathleen McKeown Shares Deep Insights
Second-year PhD student Cheng Chi talks about how his research on robotic control won a Best Paper Award at RSS … Continue reading Voices of CS: Cheng Chi
Michelle Zhou (PhD ’99) explains what no-code AI means and presents five inflection points that led to her current work, including the impact of two professors in graduate school who helped her find her direction … Continue reading ACM ByteCast Podcast: Human-Centered AI Researcher and Entrepreneur Michelle Zhou
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President Bollinger announced that Columbia University along with many other academic institutions (sixteen, including all Ivy League universities) filed an amicus brief in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York challenging the Executive Order regarding immigrants from seven designated countries and refugees. Among other things, the brief asserts that “safety and security concerns can be addressed in a manner that is consistent with the values America has always stood for, including the free flow of ideas and people across borders and the welcoming of immigrants to our universities.”
This recent action provides a moment for us to collectively reflect on our community within Columbia Engineering and the importance of our commitment to maintaining an open and welcoming community for all students, faculty, researchers and administrative staff. As a School of Engineering and Applied Science, we are fortunate to attract students and faculty from diverse backgrounds, from across the country, and from around the world. It is a great benefit to be able to gather engineers and scientists of so many different perspectives and talents – all with a commitment to learning, a focus on pushing the frontiers of knowledge and discovery, and with a passion for translating our work to impact humanity.
I am proud of our community, and wish to take this opportunity to reinforce our collective commitment to maintaining an open and collegial environment. We are fortunate to have the privilege to learn from one another, and to study, work, and live together in such a dynamic and vibrant place as Columbia.
Sincerely,
Mary C. Boyce
Dean of Engineering
Morris A. and Alma Schapiro Professor