Recent News & Accomplishments

 2023

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The National Science Foundation-funded project aims to develop a device that utilizes living cells to detect scents.
A team of researchers from the University of Maryland is developing a portable device to identify different odors throughout an environment. Funded by a four-year, $2 million grant from the National Science Foundation, the “nose on a chip” project aims to develop a device that uses living cells to detect scents. According to project leader and mechanical engineering professor Elisabeth Smela , creating an artificial nose is important because scent is one of the five senses that technology has yet to replicate. “On our cellphones we have cameras, we have microphones, we have gyroscopes, we...  read more
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Google recognizes Distinguished University Professor Dinesh Manocha for his innovative work in robot navigation.
University of Maryland Distinguished University Professor of Computer Science Dinesh Manocha recently received a Google Faculty Award to further his research utilizing large language models (LLMs) for autonomous mobile robot navigation. Manocha's research sits at the vital intersection of human language and robotics. “To make household robots truly indispensable, they must seamlessly comprehend human instructions,” Manocha said. “Large language models can address this need by absorbing vast amounts of data about the logical structures of various environments, particularly domestic settings.”...  read more
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UMD Robotics has risen to 10th in the US, according to the 2023 rankings on csrankings.org.
University of Maryland Robotics is now ranked #10 in the US by the website csrankings.org . Previously, UMD was ranked #11; this new 2023 ranking means the university has cracked the “top 10.” CSRankings is a metrics-based ranking of top computer science institutions around the world and is popular in the broad CS and AI community. The model identifies institutions and faculty actively engaged in research across various areas of computer science based on the number of publications by faculty that have appeared at the most selective computer science conferences. Csrankings.org has a FAQ page...  read more
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UMD's Department of Computer Science reflects on five decades of tremendous growth.
Hundreds gathered to commemorate the University of Maryland Department of Computer Science’s 50th anniversary on October 7, 2023. The celebration —filled with reflections, forward-looking discussions and honorary events—showcased the remarkable journey of a department that began with just a handful of faculty members and students in the early ’70s and is now a highly esteemed and top-ranked program. Throughout the day, more than 500 alums, students, faculty and staff members, and distinguished guests attended engaging panel discussions, inspiring keynote sessions and guided tours of the...  read more
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Lin details Amazon career and team's emphasis on 3D technology in interview with Amazon.
Tell us about your Amazon career journey. I have been with Amazon as a Scholar since 2020. Although I have worked closest to my teammates in Fashion Technology, I have also worked with AWS and Imaging Sciences Teams on designing and developing various technologies for image-based retrieval, 3D body and geometry (including garment) reconstruction, material recovery, personnel promotions, and more. I also work with the Amazon Science team to help recruit scholars, postdocs, and interns and to evaluate proposals on novel technology concepts and center activities. Tell us about your team and your...  read more
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REtrieval-Augmented Audio CAPtioning (RECAP) has a unique ability to caption previously unheard audio events and intricate multi-sound audios.
In a paper submitted to the arxiv server, researchers from the University of Maryland proposed REtrieval-Augmented Audio CAPtioning (RECAP), a novel technique to enhance audio captioning performance when generalizing across domains. The research team, led by Department of Computer Science Professors Ramani Duraiswami and Dinesh Manocha and including master's students Chandra Kiran Reddy Evuru , Sreyan Ghosh and Sonal Kumar , conducted a study that showcases RECAP's performance on benchmark datasets. The study highlights its unique ability to caption previously unheard audio events and...  read more
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A study done by Associate Professor Sohiel Feizi and his team shows that it's pretty easy to evade watermarks.
A traditional watermark is a visible logo or pattern that can appear on anything from the cash in your wallet to a postage stamp, all in the name of discouraging counterfeiting. You might have seen a watermark in the preview to your graduation photos, for example. But in the case of artificial intelligence, it takes a slight twist, as most things in the space usually do. In the context of AI, watermarking can allow a computer to detect if text or an image is generated from artificial intelligence. But why watermark images to begin with? Generative art creates a prime breeding ground for the...  read more
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Derived from the ancient Greek term for ‘marketplace,’ agora is not just an app; it’s a transformation in meal planning.
It's no surprise that the current wave of tech innovation originates from hubs like Silicon Valley. But now, a dynamic duo of undergraduates at the University of Maryland (UMD) are showing that innovative solutions can emerge from university halls on the East Coast. Today, as third-year computer science undergrads, Pranav Dulepet (B.S. '25, computer science) and Mukund Shankar (B.S. '25, computer science) are on the brink of transforming meal planning with their innovative startup, agora . Derived from the ancient Greek term for ‘marketplace,’ agora is not just an app; it’s a transformation...  read more
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The innovative concept is a dataset that teaches machine learning systems to recognize 20 different types of fruits and vegetables in various forms.
While significant advancements have been made in computer vision the past few years, teaching a computer to identify objects as they change shape remains an Achilles heel in the field, particularly with generative artificial intelligence (AI) systems. Computer science researchers at the University of Maryland have come up with an innovative project to tackle this problem, using objects that we alter everyday—fruits and vegetables. Their end product is Chop & Learn, a dataset that teaches machine learning systems to recognize 20 different types of fruits and vegetables in various forms—...  read more
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Grant funds bilingual capabilities of health chatbot for moms of babies.
A University of Maryland chatbot under development to help bleary-eyed new moms manage the uncertainty of caring for a baby will soon field questions in both English and Spanish, thanks to a new grant from the National Institutes of Health. The AI-based app called Rosie aims to bridge the divide in care for new mothers and babies of color by providing 24-hour, validated health information on topics ranging from medication dosages to major milestones and recognize signs of postpartum depression. It initially received a $3.7 million NIH grant in 2021; the additional $200,000 awarded last month...  read more