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What and Who

Can Computers Beat Humans at Design?

Wojciech Matusik (MIT) (Humboldt Research Award)
MIT
INF Distinguished Lecture Series

Wojciech Matusik is a professor in MIT's Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and leads the Computational Design and Fabrication Group at the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. His research interests are in computer graphics, computational design and fabrication, computer vision, robotics and human-computer interaction. Before coming to MIT, he worked at Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories, Adobe Systems and Disney Research Zurich. He has received a Ruth and Joel Spira Award for Excellence in Teaching, a DARPA Young Faculty Award and a Sloan Foundation fellowship. He has been named one of the world's top 100 young innovators by MIT Technology Review and received a Significant New Researcher Award from ACM SIGGRAPH. He recently received a Humboldt Research Award from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation (AvH).
AG 1, AG 2, AG 3, INET, AG 4, AG 5, D6, SWS, RG1, MMCI  
AG Audience
English

Date, Time and Location

Friday, 14 March 2025
10:00
60 Minutes
E1 5
002
Saarbrücken

Abstract

Design is everywhere: high-performance turbines, polymers with outstanding material properties, unmanned aerial vehicles, metamaterials, or computer algorithms. However, the best designs are a product of tremendous work of high-skilled domain experts. I will show that we are on the verge of a transition where computational methods start beating humans at design. I will describe a series of questions that need to be addressed to move the field of computational design forward: how to represent a design, how to represent design space, how to find designs with optimal performance, and how to bridge the gap between simulation and reality.

Contact

Sabine Zimmer
+49 681 9325 4003
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Uwe Brahm, 03/14/2025 03:02
Sabine Zimmer, 03/13/2025 14:12 -- Created document.