August 5, 2014
Congratulations to PhD student Lisa Soros and professor Kenneth Stanley, who won the Best Poster Award for their poster “Identifying Necessary Conditions for Open-Ended Evolution through the Artificial Life World of Chromaria,” at the Fourteenth International Conference on the Synthesis and Simulation of Living Systems (ALIFE 14).
July 28, 2014
Congratulations to Dr. Kenneth Stanley and former CS PhD alumnus Dr. Brian Woolley. On July 17th their paper,
July 21, 2014
Congratulations to Dr. Mainak Chatterjee for receiving $53,920.00 from The Research Foundation of the State University of New York (SUNY) for a project titled “Demo: Exploiting Diversity for Survivability of Cyberspace”.
July 17, 2014
Congratulations to Dr. Hassan Foroosh on receiving $19,685 in new funding, for a total of $68,308, from Jackson Technologies LLC, for a project titled: “Airborne Multi-Sensor Visual Data Processing”.
July 7, 2014
Congratulations to Dr. Sumit Jha for receiving $487,627 in new funding from the NSF for a project titled “SHF: Small: Exascale Formal Verification for Parameterized Probabilistic Models of Complex”.
June 30, 2014
Congratulations to Dr. Greg Welch and Dr. Charlie Hughes (along with Dr. Arjun Nagendran) for receiving $178,437 in new funding (for a total of $678,615) from the Office of Naval Research for their grant titled “Human-Surrogate Interaction”.
June 30, 2014
Congratulations to Dr. Kenneth Stanley on receiving $472,542 in new funding from the NSF for a project titled “RI: Small: Neuroevolution of Brain-Inspired Computational Models Over Vast Timescales”.
June 30, 2014
Congratulations to Dr. Mubarak Shah on receiving $86,370 in new funding from the US Army Contracting Command for a project titled “Visual Analytics in Multiple Camera Networks”.
June 30, 2014
Congratulations to Dr. Haiyan (Nancy) Hu for receiving $416,456 in new funding from the NSF for a project titled “ABI Innovation: Computational Analysis of microRNA Binding”.
June 25, 2014
After competing in the World Finals, the UCF Programming Team finished 3rd in North America (USA and Canada) and 21st worldwide, beating teams from schools such as MIT, Stanford, and Carnegie Mellon.