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Master of Science in Product Management Launch your product management career in one focused year Perhaps you dream of delivering innovative, affordable healthcare to the underserved or creating more efficient transportation systems for a sustainable future. Maybe your mission is to build an app to promote accessible education or create an immersive entertainment experience. Whatever problem you a
News › Stories › Archives › 2017 › January › Carnegie Mellon Artificial Intelligence Beats Top Poker Pros Libratus, an artificial intelligence developed by Carnegie Mellon University, made history by defeating four of the world’s best professional poker players in a marathon 20-day poker competition, called “Brains Vs. Artificial Intelligence: Upping the Ante” at Rivers Casino in Pittsburgh.
Use educational affordances of robotics to create CS-STEM opportunities for all learners Mission and Impact Carnegie Mellon Robotics Academy studies how educators can use robots to teach Computer Science, Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (CS-STEM). Our mission is to use the educational affordances of robotics to create CS-STEM opportunities for all learners. We fulfill our mission
When Shipping Petroleum, Air Pollution and Greenhouse Gas Emissions Costs More Than Accidents While the policy debate surrounding crude oil transportation costs has emphasized accidents and spills, a new study by Carnegie Mellon University and University of Pittsburgh researchers indicates the debate is overlooking a far more serious external cost—air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. Heinz
Design & Teach a Course Articulate Your Learning Objectives Before you decide on the content to cover in your course, endow your course with a strong internal structure conducive to student learning. Alignment among three main course components ensures an internally consistent structure. Alignment is when the: OBJECTIVES articulate the knowledge and skills you want students to acquire by the end o
Carnegie Mellon's Six-legged "Snake Monster" Is First of New Breed of Reconfigurable Modular Robots Innovative Software, Interfaces and Actuators Make It Easy to Customize Robots By Byron Spice / 412-268-9068 Carnegie Mellon University's latest robot is called Snake Monster, however, with six legs, it looks more like an insect than a snake. But it really doesn't matter what you call it, says its i
News › Stories › Archives › 2016 › March › Most Presidential Candidates Speak at Grade 6-8 Level Trump Generally Scores Lowest; Lincoln Remains Benchmark By Byron Spice / 412-268-9068 / bspice@cs.cmu.edu A readability analysis of presidential candidate speeches by researchers in Carnegie Mellon University's Language Technologies Institute (LTI) finds most candidates using words and grammar ty
Teaching in Tumultuous Times: What Can Instructors Do to Support Students? Events of crisis, tragedy, or social unrest may take an emotional and cognitive toll on students, disrupt their lives, and interfere with learning for extended periods. Here we have strategies and resources to help instructors support students in tumultuous times. Generative AI Tools FAQ (Updated August 2023) In response to
News › Stories › Archives › 2015 › August › Carnegie Mellon Spinoff Ottomatika Acquired by Delphi Company Builds on University Strengths in Pioneering Autonomous Vehicle Research By Sherry Stokes / 412-268-5976 / stokes@cmu.edu and Ken Walters / 412-268-1151 / walters1@andrew.cmu.edu Professor Raj Rajkumar poses between CMU's latest self-driving car, a Cadillar SRX, and the university's first
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 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
Say goodbye to smeared screens and cracked glass, Chris Harrison has done it again. The prolific computer scientist's latest creation, Skinput, turns the human body into a giant touchscreen. Developed as a response to the increasingly uncomfortable miniaturization of modern keypads, the third year Ph.D. student in Carnegie Mellon's Human-Computer Interaction Institute (HCII) produced Skinput with
Education Ph.D., University of Cambridge Research It is now well-established that black holes are an important feature of our cosmic environment. Stellar-mass black holes number in the millions in every galaxy; there is now conclusive evidence that black holes as massive as a billion suns reside at the centers of most galaxies. Black holes are thought to power the most energetic phenomena in the U
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
There have been a number of inaccurate media reports in recent days regarding Carnegie Mellon University's Software Engineering Institute work in cybersecurity. Carnegie Mellon University includes the Software Engineering Institute, which is a federally funded research and development center (FFRDC) established specifically to focus on software-related security and engineering issues. One of the m
News › Stories › Archives › 2015 › August › BrainHub Scientists Visualize Critical Part of Basal Ganglia Pathways Breakthrough Could Help See Pathways That Degenerate with Parkinson’s and Huntington’s Disease By Shilo Rea / 412-268-6094 / shilo@cmu.edu Certain diseases, like Parkinson’s and Huntington’s disease, are associated with damage to the pathways between the brain’s basal ganglia regi
News › Stories › Archives › 2015 › August › Patient-Funded Trials May Do More Harm Than Good, Ethicists Warn By Shilo Rea / 412-268-6094 / shilo@cmu.edu In the era of launching Kickstarter campaigns to pay for just about anything, Carnegie Mellon University ethicists warn that the trend of patients funding their own clinical trials may do more harm than good. CMU’s Danielle Wenner and Alex Jo
(Some sections adapted from Davis, 1993; Brookfield and Preskill, 1999) Discussions can be an excellent strategy for enhancing student motivation, fostering intellectual agility, and encouraging democratic habits. They create opportunities for students to practice and sharpen a number of skills, including the ability to articulate and defend positions, consider different points of view, and enlist
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