The Wall Street Journal included insight from College of Engineering Dean Ayanna Howard in an article exploring why some are getting fooled into thinking AI is really thinking.
The Wall Street Journal included insight from College of Engineering Dean Ayanna Howard in an article exploring why some are getting fooled into thinking AI is really thinking.
Professor Ness Shroff, an Ohio Eminent Scholar, focuses on the “edge” of networks, or the space outside data centers where AI devices, intelligent transportation, remote health care, distributed robotics and smart aerospace live.
A research effort that began with a $50,000 internal grant from The Ohio State University has led to a multimillion dollar federal award aimed at using artificial intelligence to predict Alzheimer’s disease years before symptoms appear.
Developed by law and computer science students in the JusticeTech Program at the Moritz College of Law, the tool helps tenants communicate more effectively with landlords and resolve issues before they escalate into courtroom disputes.
Across the summit, attendees explored a wide range of topics, from AI in health and responsible AI to governance, security and dynamical systems.
Anastasia Shikanova is a PhD student in the College of Education and Human Ecology. She is also the founder and host of the "AI Fluent" GenAI Study Group, an interdisciplinary initiative within EHE for graduate students interested in exploring generative AI in education.
AHAII will serve as a national model for how the arts and humanities can shape the future of AI: not merely as tools or technologies, but as cultural forces that demand ethical scrutiny, historical awareness and imaginative rethinking.
Improving Motion Modeling is funded by a 2026 Schmidt Sciences HAVI Development Award, as one of 11 interdisciplinary research teams across the globe to explore ambitious, collaborative AI interventions that have the potential to catalyze major breakthroughs in the humanities.
What does the future look like? How do we use AI to our benefit? What should humans do and what should AI do? “Our bet at Ohio State is that we, as scholars, will answer these questions,” Ohio State President Ravi V. Bellamkonda says.