MIT COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE LABORATORY

2
The Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) at MIT was formed on July 1, 2003, by the merger of the former Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and the Laboratory for Computer Science. Both of those labs traced their heritage to Project Mac which was formed exactly forty years earlier on July 1, 1963. Computation lies at the heart of understanding all physical and biological systems. Many solutions to the most challenging problems of our lives, our work, and our world, therefore, are based in computation. CSAIL studies this vast, compelling field in an effort to unlock the secrets of human intelligence, extend the functional capabilities of machines, and explore human/machine interactions. We apply that knowledge with a long-term lens to engineer innovative solutions with global impact. CSAIL has earned a prestigious reputation among the world’s leading computer scientists, mathematicians, and engineers through three areas of differentiation: An entrepreneurial approach. Ideas are our currency; through partnerships with industry, institutions, and other research groups, we refine and model ideas until they become reality. Our research has spawned more than 100 technology companies, evidence of our track record in creating innovative ideas that in turn generate substantial value. A distinguished faculty. Nearly one-third of our faculty are members of the US national academies. Our ranks include 68 professional society fellows, six MacArthur fellows, four Turing Award winners, two Nevanlinna Prize winners, and one Millennium Technology Prize winner. A breadth of expertise. The largest lab at MIT, CSAIL’s expertise is drawn from the Institute’s Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Mathematics, Aeronautics and Astronautics, Brain and Cognitive Science, Mechanical Engineering, Media Arts and Sciences, and Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences departments, and the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology. MIT COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE LABORATORY CSAIL is the largest Interdepartmental lab at MIT with over 800 members including more than 90 Principal Investigators from 8 departments and approximately 500 students.

Transcript of MIT COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE LABORATORY

Page 1: MIT COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE LABORATORY

The Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) at MIT was formed on July 1, 2003, by the merger of the former Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and the Laboratory for Computer Science.Both of those labs traced their heritage to Project Mac which was formed exactly forty years earlier on July 1, 1963.

Computation lies at the heart of understanding all physical and biological systems. Many solutions to the most challenging problems of our lives, our work, and our world, therefore, are based in computation. CSAIL studies this vast, compelling field in an effort to unlock the secrets of human intelligence, extend the functional capabilities of machines, and explore human/machine interactions. We apply that knowledge with a long-term lens to engineer innovative solutions with global impact.

CSAIL has earned a prestigious reputation among the world’s leading computer scientists, mathematicians, and engineers through three areas of differentiation:

An entrepreneurial approach. Ideas are our currency; through partnerships with industry, institutions, and other research groups, we refine and model ideas until they become reality. Our research has spawned more than 100 technology companies, evidence of our track record in creating innovative ideas that in turn generate substantial value.

A distinguished faculty. Nearly one-third of our faculty are members of the US national academies. Our ranks include 68 professional society fellows, six MacArthur fellows, four Turing Award winners, two Nevanlinna Prize winners, and one Millennium Technology Prize winner.

A breadth of expertise. The largest lab at MIT, CSAIL’s expertise is drawn from the Institute’s Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Mathematics, Aeronautics and Astronautics, Brain and Cognitive Science, Mechanical Engineering, Media Arts and Sciences, and Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences departments, and the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology.

MIT COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE LABORATORY

CSAIL is the largest

Interdepartmental

lab at MIT with over

800 members

including more than

90 Principal

Investigators from 8

departments and

approximately 500

students.

Page 2: MIT COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE LABORATORY

Our legacy of innovation includes time sharing, public-key encryption, bit-mapped displays, workstations,

networks, computer architecture, computer vision, robotics, and speech. These technological innovations have

spawned nearly 100 spin-offs, such as Akamai, Ascent Technology, Bluespec, Determina, iRobot, ITA Software,

Meraki, Open Market, RSA, Sandburst, Sight Path, Scalable Display, Speechworks, StreamBase, Tilera, and Vertica.

Over the past four decades, CSAIL has also played a major role in standards setting, including TCP/IP, GNU, X-

windows, and the Worldwide Web.

With approximately 50 research groups working on hundreds of diverse projects, our researchers are focused on finding innovative ways to make systems and machines operate faster, better, safer, easier, and more efficiently for the benefit of humanity. Our projects fall into three areas of inquiry:

Artificial intelligence – We seek to understand and develop both living and artificial systems capable of intelligent reasoning, perception, and behavior.

Systems – We seek to discover new principles, models, metrics, and tools of both hardware- and software-based computer systems.

Theory – We seek to understand the mathematics of computation and its wide-ranging, real-world consequences.

Housed in the architecturally distinctive Stata Center, bolstered by four decades of extraordinary discoveries, and committed to pursuing frontiers almost beyond imagining, CSAIL places computational thinking squarely in the service of human need. In so doing, we strive to achieve an impact as ubiquitous as computation itself.

Our current research is sponsored by a broad range of U.S. government agencies, nonprofit organizations, and worldwide corporations including Department of Defense, National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, Quanta Computers, Foxconn, Nokia, Northrop Grumman, Shell, Ford, and many others.

The research they sponsor is as varied as the organizations themselves and includes:

• Automatic, scalable summarization of user opinions

• Developing vehicles capable of safe, autonomous driving in city traffic

• Medical monitoring

• Developing an autonomous voice-actuated robotic forklift

• Developing the foundation for the World Wide Web of the future

• A mobile sensor data management system

• Database and open annotation tool for sharing and annotating images

• New opportunities for user interface customization

• Multicore computing

• Virtualizing the computing, communication, and information environment

• Computer games for second language learning

• Applying sensor technology to traffic congestion

• Developing the future mobile communication ecosystem

• Robotic locomotion and human-robot interfaces

MIT CSAILThe MIT Stata Center32 Vassar StreetCambridge, MA 02139617.253.8924

csail.mit.edu