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News › Stories › Archives › 2017 › January › CMU Artificial Intelligence Is Tough Poker Player Libratus builds substantial lead in Brains vs. AI competition By Byron Spice (CMU) and Garrett Allen (Rivers Casino) As the “Brains Vs. Artificial Intelligence: Upping the Ante” poker competition nears its halfway point, Carnegie Mellon University’s AI program, called Libratus, is opening a lead ove
News › Stories › Archives › 2017 › January › Upping the Ante: Top Poker Pros Face Off vs. Artificial Intelligence 20-day contest at Rivers Casino in Pittsburgh begins Jan. 11 By Byron Spice and Garrett Allen Poker Pro Dong Kim shown here in the first Brains vs. AI contest in 2015. Four of the world’s best professional poker players will compete against artificial intelligence developed by Car
Welcome Back to Campus! The CPDC is OPEN Monday-Friday, 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. Welcome to the Career & Professional Development Center! The Career and Professional Development Center (CPDC) is Carnegie Mellon University’s centralized career services center providing a comprehensive range of services, programs and materials focusing on career exploration and decision making, professional development, e
Tom Mitchell's two daughters are grown but watching his newest 'baby' learn to read is an unprecedented achievement. Professor Mitchell leads the team that developed the Never-Ending Language Learner – NELL – a computer system that, over time, is teaching itself to read and understand the web. "I've been interested for many, many years in how machines learn because I'm also interested in how human
Welcome to Psychology at CMU. With nearly 30 award-winning faculty and almost 150 people in total, we are a vibrant community whose research continues our department’s 100-year tradition of studying the deeper mechanisms and processes underlying human behavior and its social and neural bases. Innovation is in our DNA: our department has been at the center of helping create new scientific initiativ
Published: July 25, 2008 Learn more about Randy's story >> Randy Pausch, the professor at Carnegie Mellon University who inspired countless students in the classroom and others worldwide through his highly acclaimed last lecture, has died of complications from pancreatic cancer. He was 47. Also a Carnegie Mellon alumnus, Pausch co-founded the Entertainment Technology Center and led researchers who
Be the first penguin. Click the penguin to learn how Randy used penguins as a motivating tool » On September 18, 2007, Carnegie Mellon professor and alumnus Randy Pausch delivered a one-of-a-kind last lecture that made the world stop and pay attention. It became an internet sensation viewed by millions, an international media story, and a best-selling book that has been published in more than 35 l
Spotlight Story CMU lent expertise to new AI 'roadmap' for the U.S. Get up to speed on the recommendations
Press Release Contact: Byron Spice 412-268-9068 Anne Watzman 412-268-3830 For immediate release: June 13, 2006 Carnegie Mellon Researchers Teach Computers To Perceive Three Dimensions in 2-D Images Program Automatically Generates 3-D Models From a Single Photograph Above is a composite image of Carnegie Mellon's University Center, showing a photograph (top left) and three 3-D reconstruction
Face-to-face class, online, or hybrid. Evidence-based learning science. Improved student outcomes from nonprofit higher ed.
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