
ColumbiaCompSci
@columbiacompsci
Computer Science Department at Columbia University
ID: 432802664
http://www.cs.columbia.edu 09-12-2011 20:08:09
2,2K Tweet
3,3K Followers
112 Following





At our next Distinguished Lecture, Nick Nick Feamster will discuss how advances in access speeds, QoE inference, and Internet equity shape how we analyze performance and improve user experience. WHEN: December 9 (Monday) 1140am WHERE: CSB 451 INFO: bit.ly/CompSciEvents





Josh Alman (Josh Alman) is the “Researcher of the Month” featured by Columbia Research for his work as a theoretical computer scientist. Read on to see how he explores computation through the lens of algebraic algorithms. research.columbia.edu/researcher-of-…


Our Winter 2025 Magazine is here! Check out stories on the role of AI in education, the emergence of engineering approaches to women’s health, and the power of collaboration. Read the online issue today: #Engineering⚒️ #ColumbiaEngineering #Engineering4Humanity Columbia University


Dean Shih-Fu Chang and Vice Dean Vishal Misra discuss how SEAS is driving and responding to this exciting moment in the development of artificial intelligence. Read here: bit.ly/4h7TjHD and more in the Winter Issue of the Columbia Engineering Magazine bit.ly/4fsg4nK



Imagine a camera 📷 that captures measurements while protecting your privacy. That’s what ColumbiaCompSci PhD student Jeremy Klotz is working on, and is today’s #ThesisThursday!



At Columbia University is the first institution to be part of the accelerator program. Our prof zhou Yu will lead research on Natural Language Processing (NLP) and using localized NLP models within robotic systems at Columbia Engineering bit.ly/3QuzqyM

Having a full-house in our AI Agent at Work Workshop at Columbia! Columbia Dean of Engineering Schi-fu Chang is opening the workshop. daplab.cs.columbia.edu/workshop/index… Columbia Engineering ColumbiaCompSci Columbia University Thanks Intellect and Celonis for sponsoring the workshop.



What makes a video game fun? Chances for exploration, choice, and discovery. For blind and low-vision (BLV) players, accessibility often means skipping straight to the end of the game, leaving out the exciting parts of playing. Assistant Professor Brian A. Smith and the


