Award from the Public Interest Technology University Network is part of $3 million “Network Challenge” to grow the field of public interest technology. Three Columbia professors working at the intersection
Visual Relationships as Functions: Enabling Few-Shot Scene Graph Prediction
Authors Apoorva Dornadula, Austin Narcomey, Ranjay Krishna, Michael Bernstein, Li Fei-Fei Image: We introduce a scene graph approach that formulates predicates as learned functions, which result in an embedding space
Scene Graph Prediction with Limited Labels
Authors Vincent Chen, Paroma Varma, Ranjay Krishna, Michael Bernstein, Christopher Re, Li Fei-Fei Image: Our semi-supervised method automatically generates probabilistic relationship labels to train any scene graph model. Abstract Visual
A Taxonomy for VR
Eve Weston, CEO and founder of Los-Angeles based VR studio Exelauno told Stanford students that she has developed a way to talk about VR — what she calls a “taxonomy” for
Office Hours Announced for CJS Students
The Brown Institute is pleased to announce appointment-based office hours for students needing help in all things digital. This includes (but is not limited to) students seeking assistance with data
View-Dependent Video Textures for 360° Video
Authors Sean J. Liu, Maneesh Agrawala, Stephen DiVerdi, Aaron Hertzmann Image: In 360◦ video, viewers can look anywhere at any time. In the opening scene of Invasion!, a rabbit emerges
Rethinking Audio @ Stanford with Google News
Rethinking Audio: Michael Mellody and Liz Gannes, Google News The rise of virtual assistants increasingly allows us to be informed, enlightened and entertained when our hands and eyes are busy.
AI-based Request Augmentation to Increase Crowdsourcing Participation
Authors Junwon Park, Ranjay Krishna, Pranav Khadpe, Li Fei-Fei, Michael Bernstein Abstract To support the massive data requirements of modern supervised machine learning (ML) algorithms, crowdsourcing systems match volunteer contributors
Stanford Welcomes Washington Post’s Director of Engineering
Stanford welcomed Jeremy Bowers, Director of Engineering, at The Washington Post. Bowers and his team are ramping up for the 2020 election, focusing on political data projects including election restyles,







