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Computer Science & Artificial Intelligence Laboratory: CSAIL

The MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory was formed on July 1st, 2003. It is an interdepartmental laboratory which includes faculty from Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Mathematics, Brain and Cognitive science, Aeronautics and Astronautics, Ocean Engineering, the Biological Engineering Division and the Harvard-MIT Division of health Sciences and technology. CSAIL is also the home of the World Wide Web Consortium.

CSAIL was formed by the merger of the Laboratory for Computer science (LCS) and the Artificial Intelligence laboratory (AI), each of which had sprung from Project Mac, itself founded on July 1st, 1963.

The primary mission of CSAIL is research in both computation and artificial intelligence, broadly construed. It is organized into four broad research areas:

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Systems
  • Theory

More specific research topics include, but are not limited to, algorithms, computational models for molecular biology, computer architecture, cryptography, data-bases, distributed systems, geometric algorithms, graphics, human motor control, machine learning, natural and spoken language, networks, operaing systems, parallel systems, programming languages, prosthetics, robotics, scientific computing, security and privacy, semantic web, software, synthetic biology, theory of computation, verification, and vision.

Much of the research at CSAIL is done as projects by one faculty member plus their undergraduate, graduate, and post-doctoral students. Sometimes two or three faculty members work together on larger projects. And sometimes a very large number of faculty work together on a large collaborative thrust, such as the Oxygen Project for pervasive human centered computing. We are currently developing collaborative thrusts in healthcare and in computing and biology.

Research at CSAIL is sponsored by a large number of US government agencies and a wide spectrum of US and international companies. Sponsors include DARPA, NSF, NASA, CIA, NIH, ONR, AFOSR, Hewlett Packard, Microsoft, NTT, Nokia, Philips, Acer, Delta Electronics, ITRI, Sun, IBM, Ford, Intel, and Honda.

In March 2004, CSAIL moved into the Dreyfoos and Gates towers of the Ray and Maria Stata Center on the MIT campus.

Students interested in working on specific CSAIL projects should contact the faculty member in charge of the project to learn about available UROP opportunities.

UROP INFO SESSION:

Want to work on cool projects, have fun and get paid?

Please come to our Informational Meeting on Tuesday, April 7, 2009 to hear faculty, researchers and grad students present on exciting research happenings at CSAIL, and how you can be a part of them!

What: Summer UROP Opportunities at the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL)
When: Tuesday, April 7, 3:30-5:00 PM
Where: Stata Center Patil Conference Room (32-G449)

*Cookies and refreshments will be served*

**If you are unable to attend, but are still interested in the program, please send an email to merriman@csail.mit.edu

MIT
Massachuesetts Institute of Technology


77 Massachusetts Avenue, Bldg. 7-104, Cambridge, MA 02139
Tel: 617-253-7306, Fax: 617-258-8816

UROP Contacts

UROP and Payroll Coordinator:

John Merriman
32-G425a, x4-8353
merriman@csail.mit.edu

Director:

Prof. Victor Zue
32-G470, x3-8513,
zue@csail.mit.edu

UROP for Credit:

Arranged through the
faculty supervisor's
academic department.