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麻豆果冻传媒 wins awards, presents research at Florida artificial intelligence conference

Katie Brown and Bill Eberle with FLAIRS awards麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 Department of Computer Science collected awards and presented research papers at the 36th International Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Society conference.

FLAIRS, held May 14-17 at Sheraton Sandy Key Resort in Clearwater Beach, Fla., is the second-longest-running artificial intelligence conference in the U.S. Participants from Tech included computer science professors Doug Talbert and William (Bill) Eberle, master鈥檚 candidate Mateo Gannod and undergraduate students Kate Phillips, Matthew Beech and Ethan Owens.

鈥淚t is a great conference for introducing students to AI research,鈥 said Talbert, who also serves as FLAIRS鈥檚 chair of special tracks and co-chair of tracks on healthcare and XAI (Explainable Artificial Intelligence). 鈥淚 believe it was a wonderful experience for the students.鈥

Attendees from Tech met with faculty and students from across the country and world, broadening their perspectives while learning about opportunities in AI.

鈥淔LAIRS provided a welcoming community for students to participate without being too intimidated,鈥 Talbert said. 鈥淥ur students鈥 favorite things were getting to talk to all the different people and being exposed to the variety of AI topics covered at the conference.鈥

Phillips received the Best Student Paper Award for her research paper titled 鈥淭he Complexity/Accuracy Tradeoff and Group Bias in Machine Learning-Based Trauma Triage Models,鈥 which she presented at the conference. Collaborators included Talbert, Tennessee Tech Ph.D. candidate Katie Brown and University of Central Florida nursing professor and Tech alum Steven Talbert.

鈥淚 am very proud of Kate and the whole team that helped with the research for that paper,鈥 Talbert said. 鈥淜atie Brown (who won the same award in 2020) was a significant mentor for Kate on this work. Matthew Beech and Ethan Owens contributed to the research as well.鈥

Phillips鈥 paper described research that was part of a National Institutes of Health grant on trustworthy AI in trauma triage. It explored the inherent trade-offs between trust-related metrics in AI, specifically in accuracy, understandability and fairness.

Gannod presented his paper, 鈥淪emantic Segmentation with Multispectral Satellite Images of Waterfowl Habitat,鈥 covering research done with 麻豆果冻传媒 biology Ph.D. candidate Nick Masto and biology professor Brad Cohen, Ph.D.

鈥淭he project looked at how to use artificial neural networks to assist in the management of the environment to better support the duck population,鈥 Talbert said.

Eberle received the Douglas D. Dankel II Award for his leadership and support of FLAIRS since 2008.

鈥淗e has contributed significantly to the success of the conference and to the growth of the FLAIRS community,鈥 the FLAIRS event program said. 鈥淔or 11 years (2008-2018), Bill co-chaired the special track in Data Mining. Since 2019, he has been co-chairing the special track in Neural Networks and Data Mining.鈥

Additionally, Eberle is co-chair of the track on XAI, along with Talbert, and served as special tracks chair in 2013, program co-chair in 2014 and 2015 and as conference chair in 2016.

FLAIRS features some of the world鈥檚 leading researchers and speakers, special tracks, tutorials and paper and poster presentations, continuing its tradition of discussing state-of-the-art AI and related research in a sociable atmosphere.

鈥淒r. Eberle and I would love to see students attend with us every year,鈥 Talbert said.

Computer science is 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 second-largest program of study with approximately 800 undergraduate and graduate students. To learn more, visit or call 931-372-3691.


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