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National Science Foundation

UT Expands Research on AI Accuracy and Reliability

Photograph of one of the UT Austin Gates Dell Complex towers, shot from below looking upward.

07/29/2025 - Big news from UTCS: With renewed funding from the National Science Foundation, IFML researchers are expanding their work to make AI more accurate, reliable, and ready for the real world. This critical research will strengthen how AI systems function — and accelerate progress in science, technology, and workforce innovation.

Daehyeok Kim Wins National Research Award for Advancing Cloud Hardware Efficiency

A professional portrait of Daehyeok Kim, smiling and wearing glasses and a light-colored blazer. Bold text on the left reads "National Research Award for Advancing Cloud Hardware Efficiency" against a blurred cityscape background. His name appears on the right side in white text.

07/23/2025 - Daehyeok Kim, an assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science at The University of Texas at Austin, has received a 2025 National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER Award for his project “Toward Programmable NICs as Multi‑Tenant Cloud Resources.” The award provides $622,738 over five years to su

UT Computer Science Students Win Prestigious NSF Graduate Research Fellowships

Three students working in a computer science lab together looking at a segway robot.

05/20/2024 - The National Science Foundation (NSF) has announced the recipients of its prestigious Graduate Research Fellowships (NSF GRFP) for 2024, and students from the Department of Computer Science at The University of Texas at Austin's College of Natural Sciences (CNS) have been prominently recognized. This year, four Computer Science students were honored with fellowships or honorable mentions, highlighting their outstanding contributions and potential in various cutting-edge research areas.

Professors Greg Durrett and Yuke Zhu Awarded NSF CAREER Awards

Professors Greg Durett and Yuke Zhu

03/10/2022 - The National Science Foundation's CAREER Award celebrates early-career faculty who have demonstrated the potential to serve as academic role models and leaders in the mission of their department or organization. This is an annual award presented by the National Science Foundation (NSF) from which recipients receive a federal grant for research and education activities.

Shacham Receives NSF Grant for Cybersecurity Research

UT Computer Science Professor Hovav Shacham

11/10/2021 - The National Science Foundation (NSF) has announced four new flagship funding awards through the Secure and Trustworthy Cyberspace (SaTC) program, including for a project focused on securing web browser operations led by Hovav Shacham, professor of computer science at the University of Texas at Austin.

UT Austin Selected as Home of National AI Institute Focused on Machine Learning

Image from Philipp Krähenbühl's Object Detection Research

08/26/2020 - The National Science Foundation has selected The University of Texas at Austin to lead NSF AI Institute for Foundations of Machine Learning, bolstering the university’s existing strengths in this emerging field. Machine learning is the technology that drives AI systems, enabling them to acquire knowledge and make predictions in complex environments. This technology has the potential to transform everything from transportation to entertainment to health care.

Calvin Lin Receives Supplemental Grant to Promote CS Learning in High School

10/06/2016 - As a part of the Computer Science for All initiative, the National Science Foundation is supplementing UTCS professor Calvin Lin’s grant to expand his high school Computer Science Principles course. The goal of Lin’s project is to train teachers to offer the course, UTeach CS, to high school students and encourage interest in computer science learning.

Expanding the Breadth and Impact of Cybersecurity and Privacy Research

07/31/2014 - Today, the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Secure and Trustworthy Cyberspace(SaTC) program announced a major grant in the form of a new "Frontier" award for the establishment of a Center for Encrypted Functionalities (CEF). The center is a collaboration among researchers at UCLA, Stanford University, Columbia University, The University of Texas at Austin, and Johns Hopkins University.