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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.

Soccernet brings AI to the game

KAUST ·

KAUST researchers Anthony Cioppa and Silvio Giancola have developed SoccerNet, an open platform for AI-driven sports analysis. SoccerNet uses a large reference set of soccer game recordings (500 games, 850 hours) to provide a platform for research. It enables researchers to develop AI systems that understand and analyze soccer games. Why it matters: This platform addresses the challenge of limited datasets in sports AI research, fostering innovation and standardized performance comparison.

KAUST becomes first FIFA research institute in the Middle East and Asia

KAUST ·

KAUST has been selected as the first FIFA Research Institute in the Middle East and Asia. KAUST will apply its research expertise to advance football-related studies, initially focusing on developing datasets that enable deeper insights into the game. The collaboration’s first project focuses on developing AI algorithms to analyze historical FIFA World Cup broadcast footage, while the second project leverages player and ball tracking data from the FIFA World Cup 2022™ Qatar and the FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023™ Australia & New Zealand. Why it matters: This partnership strengthens the intersection of sport, academia, and industry in the region through high-impact scientific inquiry.

KAUST Academy launches summer program in sports artificial intelligence in collaboration with Vista Equity Partners and Stats Perform

KAUST ·

KAUST Academy has launched a summer training program called "Artificial Intelligence in Sports" in partnership with Vista Equity Partners and Stats Perform. The program included 20 intensive sessions of lectures, labs, and competitions for students with Python and ML knowledge. Participants used real data from football competitions including the Saudi Pro League. Why it matters: This program supports Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 by investing in local talent and linking academic knowledge with real-world applications, particularly in preparation for hosting the 2034 FIFA World Cup.

Biweekly research update

KAUST ·

Professor Arnab Pain's group at KAUST discovered new insights on how a malaria protein enables parasites to spread malaria in human cells. Professor Haavard Rue's group upgraded the Integrated and Nested Laplace Approximation (INLA) for faster real-time modeling of large datasets. A KAUST-led study examined the stability of Y-series nonfullerene acceptors for organic solar cells. Why it matters: KAUST continues producing impactful research across diverse fields from medicine to climate change, advancing scientific knowledge and potential applications.

Visually Guided Balloon Popping with an Autonomous MAV at MBZIRC 2020

arXiv ·

This paper presents a fully autonomous micro aerial vehicle (MAV) developed to pop balloons using onboard sensing and computing. The system was evaluated at the Mohamed Bin Zayed International Robotics Challenge (MBZIRC) 2020. The MAV successfully popped all five balloons in under two minutes in each of the three competition runs. Why it matters: This demonstrates the potential of autonomous robotics and computer vision for real-world applications in challenging environments.