“The majority of [machine learning] solutions are currently being developed in silos, away from the real-world clinical problems and settings that these [machine learning] models will actually impact," says Assistant Professor Anna Goldenberg.
'We have really ambitious plans': Robotics research gears up at U of T Mississauga
Computer science student shows he has the right stuff in NASA internship
There are internships. And then there are internships like the one Georges Kanaan was accepted into at NASA’s Goddard Spaceflight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland — an institution that played a pivotal role in putting Apollo astronauts on the moon as well as other historic missions like the New Horizons probe to Pluto, the Curiosity Mars rover and the Hubble Space Telescope.
U of T Scarborough students join forces with IBM Watson to create the first globally collaborative financial technology (FinTech) chatbot
“What is Canada’s leading city for AI? Who are the top women in FinTech in Canada? How does Ontario help start-ups export to new markets? Robust answers to these questions and more will be accessible 24/7 to anyone using our chatbot website or app anywhere in the world,” said Adjunct Professor Mario Grech, director and co-founder of DCSIL.
Will Artificial Intelligence Improve Health Care for Everyone?
SLCs: Bringing students together for collaboration, career exploration and a sense of community
Can we eliminate bias in AI? How Canada’s commitment to multiculturalism could help it become a world leader
Announcing New Associate Chair Appointments
Changes in the Chair's Office: Chair and Vice Chair
Canada’s Changing Climate: What We Can Do Now
How to trust AI with life-or-death decisions
Nine U of T Computer Science Professors Promoted
Top Prospects: Leading innovators from the Class of 2019
56 U of T researchers supported by Canada Research Chairs Program
Stephen Cook: Celebrating a half century of computational complexity and a ground-breaking career
Two U of T professors honoured with President’s Teaching Award
Computer science prof and undergrad duo explore social phenomena on Reddit and GitHub
Assistant Professor Ashton Anderson and undergraduate student Isaac Waller are trying to answer how the nature of our engagement with online communities determines how we’ll behave on those platforms in the future, what kinds of interactions we’ll be part of and what types of information we’ll end up taking away.