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AI CLIMATE researching gather around map for conversation

AI for a Changing World

CS&E researchers are applying AI techniques to combat climate change, improve medical outcomes, and help humans better understand and utilize technology.

Jacquelyn Burt headshot

Burt Earns John Tate Award

The Tate Awards serve to recognize and reward high-quality academic advising, calling attention to the contribution academic advising makes to helping students formulate and achieve intellectual, career, and personal goals. 

Lind Hall Diversity Wall

Lind Hall Diversity Wall

The third floor of Lind Hall now features the Diversity Wall, which highlights the computer science contributions of marginalized groups throughout history.

Angel Sylvester posing outside

Ph.D. Student Angel Sylvester's Mentor’s High School Student.

Ph.D. Student Angel Sylvester talks about her experience mentoring a high school student to prepare them for the state competition and college.
Amrutha posing outside

CSpotlight: Learning The Wonders of Data Science

Amrutha Shetty talks about her experience learning more about data science.
Stock image illustrating the carbon cycle

AI-CLIMATE Study Published in Nature Communications

Scholars from the National Artificial Intelligence Institute for Climate-Land Interactions, Mitigation, Adaptation, Tradeoffs and Economy (AI-CLIMATE) published a study demonstrating how knowledge-

2,423

undergraduate students

537

graduate students

69

faculty members

The Department of Computer Science & Engineering at the University of Minnesota has come a long way in the past 50 years. We have made tremendous progress and have become one of the most vibrant and interdisciplinary departments within the College of Science and Engineering, the University of Minnesota, and the computer science field at large.

Watch and listen to stories of how the department started, the years of growth, and where we are headed in the future.