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Egemen Kolemen describes how he has used artificial intelligence to increase stability in the reactions that power nuclear fusion as a source of clean electricity. (Photos by David Dooley/Fotobuddy
Initiative aims to make Princeton a leader in AI accelerated engineering
Jonathan Conway, assistant professor of chemical and biological engineering, received an innovation grant for the project “Engineering symbiotic plant-microbe interactions for sustainable agriculture.” Photo by Sameer A. Khan/Fotobuddy
Since 2008, innovation funds have fostered research in AI fairness, sustainable agriculture, drug discovery and more
Photo by istock
Princeton hosts international conference on modeling and securing Earth’s groundwater
Biofuels composite
Charting a pathway to next-gen biofuels
Junior Faculty Awards 2024
Junior faculty awards recognize outstanding teaching and research
Russakovsky codirects an AI4ALL summer program at Princeton, where high school students learn programming and AI basics and collaborate on research projects. They present their results at the end of the three-week session. Photo by Lori Nichols
Diversifying AI through data collection and career development
Mengdi Wang in her Princeton office. Photo by Sameer A. Khan/Fotobuddy
Mengdi Wang makes a play at decoding disease
Mengdi Wang, associate professor of electrical and computer engineering and co-director of one of several new AI initiatives, spoke at Princeton's recent AI Summit. Photo by Sameer A. Khan/Fotobuddy
New initiatives bring Princeton to the fore of AI innovation
Boris Hanin, talking here with postdoctoral researchers Gage DeZoort and Mufan Li, is applying his background in mathematical physics to understand the structural properties of large neural networks that power AI systems. Photo by Sameer A. Khan/Fotobuddy
Statistics start to untangle AI networks
Arvind Narayanan and Matthew Salganik, professor of sociology, teach a course for graduate students on "Limits to Prediction." The course offers tools for critical examination of artificial intelligence and other prediction methods in various areas. Photos by Sameer Khan/Fotobuddy
Is AI too dangerous to release openly?
Professor Naveen Verma will lead a U.S.-backed project to supercharge AI hardware based on a suite of key inventions from his Princeton laboratory. Photo by Sameer A. Khan/Fotobuddy
The next AI frontier? Expanding hardware by making it more compact.

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