An all-female team including two MBZUAI master's students won the WomenHackAI competition, presented by Siemens Female Data Science Network. The team developed an anomaly detector for financial time-series datasets, achieving 99% performance. The solution involved building models to analyze historical data and a GUI for real-time data upload and anomaly flagging. Why it matters: The recognition of MBZUAI students in an international competition highlights the growing talent pool in AI within the UAE and the university's role in fostering innovation.
MBZUAI students Hanoona Bangalath and Muhammad Maaz, with perfect GPAs, had papers accepted at ECCV 2022 ("Class-agnostic Object Detection with Multi-modal Transformer") and NeurIPS 2022 ("Bridging the Gap between Object and Image-level Representation for Open-Vocabulary Detection"). Both will stay at MBZUAI for their PhDs, crediting the university's resources and faculty. Their supervisor, Salman Khan, praised their curiosity and hard work, highlighting their role in building the institution's reputation. Why it matters: The success of these students underscores MBZUAI's potential to foster high-quality AI research and attract top talent to the UAE.
Two teams from MBZUAI won awards at the IEEE SLT international hackathon held in Qatar. One team won the "Best Potential Impact Project" award for Autodub, a human-in-the-loop AI dubbing platform. The second MBZUAI team won the "Craziest Idea Award" for a commentator voice synthesizer for video games. Why it matters: The wins highlight MBZUAI's strength in applied AI research and its students' ability to develop innovative solutions with practical applications.
A team of MBZUAI graduate students won first place at the UAE University's University Challenge for their SawabAI project, which addresses AI-generated misinformation about climate change. The winning team included Salem Bin Saqer AlMarri, Hanoona Bangalath, and Muhammad Maaz, all Computer Vision Ph.D. students. SawabAI is envisioned as a platform to evaluate the authenticity and source of information, including text, image, and video, to combat fake news. Why it matters: This win highlights the growing importance of AI in addressing misinformation and promoting sustainability in government communication within the region.
MBZUAI researchers received high honors at EMNLP 2025 for two research papers, placing them in the top 2% of accepted work. One paper, MAviS, is a multimodal AI system that identifies bird species by combining images, sounds, and text. The other award-winning paper focuses on uncertainty in LLM-as-a-Judge. Why it matters: The recognition highlights MBZUAI's growing influence in NLP and multimodal AI research, particularly in domain-specific applications like biodiversity conservation.