As an AI-driven empirical software analyst, Nasir Eisty evaluates how scientific programs can be developed efficiently and generate more accurate results.
The TRUST-AI Seminar is a series of discussions to ensure AI technologies advance in capabilities while remaining secure, reliable, and ethically governed.
Researchers at UT, and the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis are using analytics and AI to understand chronic kidney disease.
Tickle College of Engineering faculty are leading six of nine AI TechX projects, advancing AI research, workforce training, and innovation.
Professor Emeritus Jack Dongarra was interviewed for WIRED magazine about the future of artificial intelligence and supercomputing.
Faculty are involved in two collaborative NSF grants that aim to address health disparities research and enhance performance and productivity of AI science.
Lynne Parker, associate vice chancellor and director of the AI Tennessee Initiative, has announced her retirement in May after more than two decades at UT.
Linda Averett has worked at Microsoft for 28 years where she helped developed ImPaCT (Infrastructure for Privacy, Compliance, and Trust) to establish “guardrails” that make AI safer for youngsters and less daunting for the average computer user.
Lynne Parker, a national leader in artificial intelligence, has returned from DC on a mission to elevate UT as a leader in the field with the AI Tennessee Initiative.
Lynne Parker is returning to the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, after completing a four-year post as deputy United States chief technology officer and director of the National Artificial Intelligence Initiative Office within the White House.