Latest News Women Comprise 40 Percent of Computer Science Majors Among Carnegie Mellon’s Incoming First-Year Class Byron Spice by Byron Spice | Wednesday, June 4, 2014 PITTSBURGH—Women, who historically have been under-represented among computer science majors nationwide, will make up 40 percent of the incoming class of undergraduates this fall in Carnegie Mellon University’s School of Computer Science (SCS). The school has been a leader in efforts to increase the number of women in the discipline of computer science and its female enrollment has long exceeded national averages. The number of women in this fall’s first-year class nevertheless sets a new benchmark for the school. Read More Pagination First page « First Previous page ‹‹ … Page 16 Page 17 Page 18 Page 19 Current page 20 Subscribe to News About Events News Key Contacts History Sitemap Employment Marketing & Communications Visit Carnegie Mellon Give CSD News RSS Feed CSD in the WorldWired: This New Algorithm for Sorting Books or Files Is Close to PerfectionThe Atlantic: Can We Align Language Models With Human Values?NEXTpittsburgh: CMU's Zico Kolter shapes new paths for AI safety and security The Link: Not Just Available, But Accessible Bringing CMU CS Academy into the Spanish LanguageNY Times: A.I. Pioneer Geoffrey Hinton Reflects on Winning the Nobel Prize in PhysicsTechCrunch: OpenAI adds a Carnegie Mellon professor to its board of directorsNBC News: More colleges are offering AI degrees — could they give job seekers an edge?Wired: Deepfakes are EvolvingAAAS: How do we use AI -- and policy -- for a better world?Post Gazette: What's Next in AI: ...The Business Journals: CMU names head of MLCode Signal 2024 Univ. RankingIEEE Spectrum: MoBot Featured in IEEE Spectrum Video FridayFast Company: What happens when we train our AI on social Media?PC Mag: How to Trick Generative AI Into Breaking Its Own RulesPost Gazette: AI Avenue's newest tenant furthers focus on defense techForbes: How Forbes Compiled the 2024 AI50 List Recent Best Papers2025 International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML) - Outstanding Paper AwardsRoll the dice & look before you leap: Going beyond the creative limits of next-token prediction - Vaishnavh Nagarajan · Chen Wu · Charles Ding · Aditi Raghunathan NAACL Student Research Workshop 2025 - Best Paper Awards Towards Codec-LM Co-design for Neural Codec Language Models - Shih-Lun Wu, Aakash Lahoti, Arjun D Desai, Karan Goel, Chris Donahue, Albert GuSIGCHI 2025 - Best Paper AwardsAMUSE: Human-AI Collaborative Songwriting with Multimodal Inspirations - Yewon Kim, Sung-Ju Lee, Chris DonahueSIGGRAPH 2024 - Best Paper Awards Walkin' Robin: Walk on Stars With Robin Boundary Conditions - Bailey Miller, Rohan Sawhney, Keenan Crane, Ioannis Gkioulekas Repulsive Shells - Josua Sassen, Henrik Schumacher, Martin Rumpf, Keenan CraneSIGGRAPH 2024 - Honorable Mentions Ray Tracing Harmonic Functions - Mark Gillespie, Denise Yang, Mario Botsch, Keenan Crane Solid Knitting - Yuichi Hirose, Mark Gillespie, Angelica M. Bonilla Fominaya, James McCann Alumni in the NewsMathematician Finds Solution to One of The Oldest Problems in Algebra - Alum Dean Rubine (CS PhD '91) co-author with Norman Wildberger
Women Comprise 40 Percent of Computer Science Majors Among Carnegie Mellon’s Incoming First-Year Class Byron Spice by Byron Spice | Wednesday, June 4, 2014 PITTSBURGH—Women, who historically have been under-represented among computer science majors nationwide, will make up 40 percent of the incoming class of undergraduates this fall in Carnegie Mellon University’s School of Computer Science (SCS). The school has been a leader in efforts to increase the number of women in the discipline of computer science and its female enrollment has long exceeded national averages. The number of women in this fall’s first-year class nevertheless sets a new benchmark for the school. Read More