Havens Quoted in Enterprisers Project Article

Tim Havens, ICC Director and associate dean for research, College of Computing, was quoted in the article, “Artificial Intelligence (AI) for beginners,” published August 20, 2020, by The Enterprisers Project. The article sets out to demystify artificial intelligence, breaking down how AI works, common types of AI, how it improves big data insights, and strategy . . .

$243K DURIP Award will Multiply Michigan Tech Research Capabilities

Dr. Timothy Havens (ICC), Dr. Andrew Barnard (GLRC), Dr. Guy Meadows (GLRC), and Dr. Gowtham (IT/ECE) have been awarded an Office of Naval Research DURIP grant titled, “Acoustic Sensing System and High-Throughput Computing Environment and Threat Monitoring in Naval Environments Using Machine Learning.” The $243,169 award will fund procurement of new high throughput computing and . . .

Yu Cai is PI of 2-year NSA GenCyber Project

Professor Yu Cai, Applied Computing, a member of the ICC’s Center for Cybersecurity, is the principal investigator on a two-year project that has received a $99,942 grant from the National Security Agency (GenCyber). The project is titled, “GenCyber Teacher Camp at Michigan Tech. ”

Curious about Your Computing Professors?

Greetings College of Computing students. Welcome to the Fall 2020 semester. College of Computing faculty recorded these 25 videos to introduce themselves to you and the College. We hope you’ll take a look. Your professors share info about their courses and research, the Computing clubs and Enterprise groups they advise, College outreach and volunteering opportunities, . . .

Tim Havens Co-Author of Article in IEEE Trans. Fuzzy Systems

Timothy Havens (DataS/CC) and Anthony Pinar (DataS/ECE) are co-authors of a paper, written in collaboration with University of Missouri researchers Muhammad Islam, Derek Anderson, Grant Scott, and Jim Keller, that has been published in the July 2020 issue of the journal IEEE Transactions on Fuzzy Systems. The article is titled, “Enabling explainable fusion in deep . . .