The insights and impact of U of T innovators in fields ranging from AI and quantum computing to sustainability and climate tech will be on display from June 23-27.
Three papers authored by U of T computer scientists among the most cited of the 21st century: Nature
U of T Computer Science faculty and alumnus among 鈥楾he 50 Most Influential Torontonians鈥
With U of T innovators front and centre, Collision conference wraps up five-year Toronto run
Maclean鈥檚 鈥楾he Power List: AI鈥 recognizes U of T CS faculty and alumni
U of T CS faculty and alumni among Time magazine鈥檚 TIME100 Most Influential People in AI
Maclean鈥檚 鈥楾op 10 AI Trailblazers鈥 list recognizes U of T CS faculty and alumni
Global News: U of T AI pioneers highlighted as key players in industry innovation
Some of the top innovators and developments in artificial intelligence have emerged from Canada in recent years, writes Global News, citing the contributions of U of T 海角视频 of Computer Science faculty and alumni.
The feature spotlights the work of University of Toronto luminary alongside other 鈥榞odfathers of deep learning,鈥 Yoshua Bengio and Yann LeCun.
Tracing the genesis of modern advancements in AI, Global News highlights the seminal roles Hinton鈥檚 former students and alumni have played in the current AI boom, including Alex Krizhevsky and Ilya Sutskever, who is chief science officer and co-founder of OpenAI.
鈥淚 think over the next many years when people write books about the history of neural networks, which will be the history of AI, there will be huge sections dedicated to the people in Canada and what they were doing,鈥 alumnus Nick Frosst told Global News.
Frosst is the co-founder of Toronto-based natural language processing startup Cohere, alongside fellow alumnus Aidan Gomez and Ivan Zhang, a former U of T computer science student.
Frosst points out heading to Silicon Valley isn鈥檛 necessarily the only option for those aspiring to a career in tech.
鈥淚 think that dream is less enticing to students as the years go on,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n part, it鈥檚 because Canada is getting better. There鈥檚 more opportunity here, there鈥檚 more companies, wages are going up 鈥 it鈥檚 a better place to be a developer,鈥 Frosst told the outlet.