We've all heard it, we all know it, we’ve all seen it: Computer science is not regarded as a “beacon” of diversity. In this interview, Professor Kenny Paterson, Head of the Department of Computer Science details his experiences with diversity, the challenges we face, and how D-INFK might be getting a bit better one step at a time.
Monitoring and treating a case of multiple sclerosis requires reliable and long-term data on how the disease is progressing in the person in question. Fitness trackers and smartphones can supply this data, as a research team led by ETH Zurich has now shown.
Artificial intelligence is transforming the way in which art is created and experienced. Are we at the beginning of a new artistic revolution? Or at the end of creativity as we know it? Adrian Christopher Notz from the ETH AI Center puts things in perspective.
In an interview with EPFL, Simon Sommerhalder, Master’s student at the Department of Computer Science and recipient of the CYD Master Thesis Fellowship, talks about his current project and the advantages of conducting his thesis at the CYD Campus.
Professor Menna El-Assady shines a torch into the black box of generative AI and talks about how a model makes decisions and whether we can correct them.
QS (Quacquarelli Symonds) unveiled its 2024 World University Rankings by Subject. ETH Zurich landed with 3 subjects in the top spot. A further 14 placed within the top ten in the world, among them Data Science and Artificial Intelligence (rank 7) and Computer Science and Information Systems (rank 9).
Professor Markus Gross receives the Eurographics Medal 2024 for his outstanding research contributions, for his contributions to bridging industry and academia and for his leadership in the field at large. Big congratulations!
On 4 and 5 April, the cyber competition Cyber 9/12 Strategy Challenge 2024 took place. Four teams from ETH Zurich participated in the challenge and one of them, team CyBerg, won first place. Big congratulations!
Generative AI has learnt to communicate and intervenes in public debates. This harbours great risks. The tech companies behind this development should not be overlooked. Prof. Florian Tramèr and his Spy Lab, Prof. Menna El-Assady.
D-INFK alumnus Patrice Becker (center), Leonhard Soenke (left) and Heiner Stinner created Throne, a gifting platform that has allowed 17 million social media users to fulfill wishlists for 500,000 of their favorite content creators on YouTube, TikTok, X, Instagram and Twitch.