A team of computational biologists from the University of Maryland has been recognized by leading technology corporation NVIDIA for their role in the development of innovative software that provides a rapid analysis of biological sequence data.
Supported by a $4.5M grant from philanthropic organizations, University of Maryland researchers are creating an open-source, high-quality dataset of classroom recordings that can be used to accelerate AI-driven outcomes for K–12 math education.
Erik Rye is researching methods to prevent tracking through wireless access points, aiming to develop protocols that can safeguard personal data in both everyday life and critical conflict zones.
Dominik Hangleiter, one of the newest Hartree Postdoctoral Fellows, develops theoretical frameworks to identify problems where quantum computers can be proven to dominate.
Metzler’s three-year project seeks to develop artificial intelligence-based multimodal sensor fusion algorithms that are fully self-supervised and do not require training data.
Being conferred Fellow status is the highest grade of IEEE membership, and one that is recognized by the technical community as a prestigious honor and an important career achievement.