The School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University is one of the world's premier institutions for CS and robotics research and education. We build useful stuff that works!
CMU School of Computer Science
Loading...
Computational biology researchers are working to better understand the role that genes play in bipolar disorder — work that's deeply rooted in decades of student ingenuity supported by the Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship program.
For the fifth straight year, CMU students took first place in the MITRE Embedded Capture the Flag cybersecurity competition, further cementing the university’s status as the top program in one of the nation’s most demanding collegiate security contests.
CMU School of Computer Science
CMU School of Computer Science
Tuomas Sandholm received the ACM SIGecom Test of Time Award for research that combined automated mechanism design with techniques from optimal stopping theory to develop online auction mechanisms that can make near-optimal decisions under uncertainty.
SoundBubble helps isolate and amplify the sounds of fingers as they tap, trace or rap various surfaces, or use different tools. That information could provide contextual hints about what users are doing and how the computer might help them.
Want to learn programming fundamentals and earn Carnegie Mellon credit along the way?
3CS, from CMU CS Academy, offers high school students with basic coding knowledge a jumpstart on college-level computer science with actual college credit!
https://academy.cs.cmu.edu/3cs
Recent CMU studies show that as older adults embrace AI, they want the technology to be more in tune with their emotional needs.
With the World Cup starting getting started, we thought it'd be a great time to highlight Shivaas Gulati, the SCS alum who's applying machine learning to help improve Southend United, the English football club he's co-owned since 2024.
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have shown that bacteria can learn from past experiences, store memories across generations and adapt their behavior to changing environments all without a brain or nervous system.
Researchers in @cmurobotics.bsky.social have designed an autonomous navigation robot that can move through orchard rows, detect fire blight symptoms and map infected trees in real time.
Congrats to Parallel Data Lab researchers including SCS faculty member Eric Xing on receiving the Test of Time Award during the 2026 EuroSys Conference!
https://www.ece.cmu.edu/news-and-events/story/2026/05/test-of-time-award.html
For the fifth consecutive year, Carnegie Mellon University students have claimed first place in the MITRE Embedded Capture the Flag (eCTF) cybersecurity competition, further cementing the university’s...
Fire blight can devastate orchards, killing branches and entire trees while causing major economic losses for growers. To help farmers detect the disease earlier and reduce the spread of infection, a ...
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have shown that bacteria can learn from past experiences, store memories across generations and adapt their behavior to changing environments all without a br...