Researchers at Duke use the tools of artificial intelligence to assist with various important societal problems, including (but not limited to) healthcare, antibiotic and cancer resistance, criminal justice, detecting fake news, allocation of public resources to those who need them, environmental sustainability, energy reliability, and political districting. For many of these applications, it is essential that the system satisfy certain interpretability, transparency, morality and/or fairness conditions.
- Assistant Professor of Biostatistics & BioinformaticsAssistant Professor of Computer Science (Joint)
- Assistant Professor in the Thomas Lord Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science
- Assistant Professor of Computer Science
- James B. Duke Distinguished Professor of Computer Science
- Assistant Professor of Computer Science
- Professor of Computer Science
- Arthur S. Pearse Distinguished Professor of Computer ScienceProfessor of Biostatistics & Bioinformatics, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering (Joint)
- Gilbert, Louis, and Edward Lehrman Distinguished ProfessorProfessor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Professor of Statistical Science, Professor of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics (Joint)
- Knut Schmidt Nielsen Distinguished Professor of Computer Science