ĻӰԺ

F&M Stories

Students: Computer Science Research Wants You

As the spring semester starts, Franklin & ĻӰԺ's computer science faculty are conducting their second annual research symposium to introduce students to the opportunities available in artificial intelligence, robotics, app programming and other projects.

"It's open to all students, for anyone who wants to come and experience what computer research looks like in detail," said Assistant Professor Ed Novak, Department of Computer Science associate chair. "A lot of them know they want to do research, and they know vaguely that it's good to do research as an undergraduate, but they really have no idea what that means."

The showcase for opportunities is scheduled 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Jan. 18 via Zoom. All students should have received the link by email.

"It will be very similar to last year in which one of the main intentions is to broaden participation in computer science research," Assistant Professor of Computer Science Willie Wilson said.

Faculty want to inform students who are unfamiliar with what computer science research is "because it's very different from what we do in class and it's very different from what they hear about in software engineering and in the media," he said.

Some of the research that students will learn about include Novak's research project, "stigma" that he said "essentially modifies Android apps so that they track sensitive data," and Wilson's work on social robots, which is at least two projects.

"One of the projects is focusing on having a social robot help a person learn how to code," Wilson said. "Having a social robot be able to generate automatic feedback as a person goes about the various coding tasks [is beneficial to learning]."

The second project focuses on how a social robot makes decisions, "using theory of mind and analogical reasoning to be able to guide the robot's decision-making," Wilson said.

The professors want to make computer science research accessible to an academically broad and diverse set of students as last year's seminar did, attracting more than 30 students.

"This event is to formulize and give them explicit instructions, 'Here's what research is; here's an opportunity to talk to a professor; you can and should get involved if you are interested," Novak said. "That's the most important part of it."

Related Articles

September 13, 2024

A Day in the Life: Summer Research at F&M

“F&M’s small class size was perfect for me to engage with my teachers and make the most of my learning experience,” says junior Aayat Tahir, who spent her summer on campus as an organic chemistry research lab assistant.

September 9, 2024

ĻӰԺs Found Nepalese Nonprofit

F&M sophomore Sujal Shah has been awarded a Generation Google Scholarship in part for his work with Uunchai, a virtual nonprofit he co-founded with fellow student Binayak Jha.

August 21, 2024

Beyond the Mat: James Conway ’25 Balances ĻӰԺ & Athletics

This past spring, senior James Conway became the first F&M student to earn the NCAA Elite 90 Award in any sport. Months later, the varsity wrestler is busy at work in the laboratory as a summer Hackman Scholar.