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Results for "Lukas Larisch"

Ph.D. student wins PACE Challenge

KAUST ·

KAUST Ph.D. student Lukas Larisch won the Parameterized Algorithms and Computational Experiments (PACE) 2017 Challenge in the Optimal Tree Decomposition Challenge, solving more instances than competitors. He received the award at the International Symposium on Parameterized and Exact Computation (IPEC 2017) in Vienna, Austria. Larisch is pursuing his Ph.D. at KAUST and working in the University's Extreme Computing Research Center, focusing on acoustics and graph structure theory. Why it matters: This recognition highlights KAUST's contribution to advanced computer science research and its ability to attract and foster talented researchers in niche areas like parameterized complexity.

Why the World Cup is a random process with a drift

KAUST ·

KAUST Professor Peter Markowich discusses the role of mathematics in football, describing a match as a random process with a drift. The randomness stems from player conditions, referee decisions, weather, and more, while the drift represents the higher probability of the better team winning. He notes that the complexity arising from 11 players on each side increases the randomness compared to sports like tennis. Why it matters: This perspective highlights the interplay of chance and skill in sports, offering a mathematical lens for understanding game dynamics.

The chops for science: Kyle Lauersen’s journey from karate to biotech

KAUST ·

Kyle Lauersen, Assistant Professor of Bioengineering at KAUST, credits his early martial arts training for instilling focus and confidence. He initially pursued education degrees but shifted to molecular biology and genetic engineering after lab experiences. Lauersen's PhD work in Germany involved recoding algal genes for biotechnology. Why it matters: His journey highlights the diverse paths to STEM careers and KAUST's role in attracting international researchers focused on sustainable biotechnology.

Derya Baran makes Forbes list

KAUST ·

KAUST Associate Professor Derya Baran was named one of Forbes’ 20 Women Behind Middle Eastern Tech Brands for her work developing iyris SecondSky, a greenhouse roofing product. SecondSky uses nanoparticle additives to block heat while allowing light to pass through, reducing energy consumption by up to 40% and water use by 30%. The technology is already used in farms across 12 countries and is being considered for residential and commercial construction in Saudi Arabia. Why it matters: This recognition highlights the growing role of women in Middle Eastern tech and the potential for KAUST-developed technologies to address sustainability challenges in the region.

LAraBench: Benchmarking Arabic AI with Large Language Models

arXiv ·

LAraBench introduces a benchmark for Arabic NLP and speech processing, evaluating LLMs like GPT-3.5-turbo, GPT-4, BLOOMZ, Jais-13b-chat, Whisper, and USM. The benchmark covers 33 tasks across 61 datasets, using zero-shot and few-shot learning techniques. Results show that SOTA models generally outperform LLMs in zero-shot settings, though larger LLMs with few-shot learning reduce the gap. Why it matters: This benchmark helps assess and improve the performance of LLMs on Arabic language tasks, highlighting areas where specialized models still excel.

AlMarri on giving back and forging his own path

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI PhD student Salem AlMarri, also a Dubai Police officer, has been appointed to the Dubai Youth Council for 2023-2025. AlMarri's research focuses on using AI to combat crime and improve emergency response times, aiming to contribute to the UAE's AI strategy. In 2019, he was recognized as one of the UAE’s up and coming scientist at the Her Highness Sheikha Fatima Bint Mubarak Program for Excellence and Community Intelligence. Why it matters: This appointment highlights the UAE's focus on empowering young talent in AI to drive innovation and address local challenges in public safety and smart city development.

Merchants in innovation

KAUST ·

KAUST hosted the KAUST Research Conference: Advances in Well Construction with Focus on Near-Wellbore Physics and Chemistry from November 7 to 9. The conference was co-chaired by Eric van Oort, a professor at UT Austin, and Tadeusz Patzek, director of the University’s Upstream Petroleum Engineering Research Center. Attendees included professors from the University of Queensland and UT Austin, and directors from GenesisRTS and Labyrinth Consulting Services, Inc. Why it matters: The conference facilitates international collaboration on advancements in petroleum engineering and well construction technologies, which are strategically important for Saudi Arabia.

Faculty Focus: Dominik Michels

KAUST ·

Dominik Michels is an assistant professor of computer science at KAUST. He is part of the Computer, Electrical and Mathematical Science and Engineering Division. Why it matters: This highlights KAUST's continued investment in attracting international faculty to strengthen its research programs.