Menlo Park, California — As part of the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, the world’s largest high school celebration of science, the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence recognized ten high school students for their outstanding projects with an artificial intelligence component.
Each winner received a $500 cash award (joint authors shared the cash award), a one-year membership in AAAI, and a one-year subscription to AAAI’s AI Magazine for the student’s high school. “AAAI members who judged this competition were quite impressed by the caliber of work these students demonstrate,” says AAAI Executive Director Carol Hamilton. “We hope this award encourages these promising young students to continue pursuing their interest in AI.”
The winners include:
- Novel Investigations for N-Gram-Based Automatic Identification of Written Language
Marek Blahus, 18, Gymnazium Uherske Hradiste, Uherske Hradiste, Czech Republic - Handwritten Number Recognition: Ants vs. Templates
Holly Kristine Zelnio, 17, Chaminade-Julienne Catholic High School, Dayton, Ohio - A Practical Implementation of Gradient-Based Convolutional Neural Networks in Handwriting Recognition
Yuetian Xu, 18, Stuyvesant High School, New York, New York - Age of Acquisition in Facial Identification: A Connectionist Approach
Brenden Manker Lake, 17, Torrey Pines High School, Encinitas, California - Artificial Cognition and Memory: Tissue Image Analysis for Tumor Diagnosis
Kimberly Elise Reinhold, 17, Saint Joseph’s High School, Hilo, Hawaii - Dynamic Balance Function and Surface Adaptation for General Humanoid Robot Platform
Yang Ge, 17, Beijing Jingshan School, Beijing, Beijing, China - The Googler
George Francis Hotz, 15, Bergen County Academies, Hackensack, New Jersey - Factors Affecting Cooperative Robotic Behavior, Year Three
Donald Stuart Eng, 17, Stanton College Preparatory School, Jacksonville, Florida - Iris Recognition for Individual Identification
Nina Maria Huffman, 17, Langley High School, McLean, Virginia - Electricity Load Forecasting Using the Support Vector Machine
Adam Shabti Charles, 17, Stuyvesant High School, New York, New York Yuriy Novodvorskiy, 17, Stuyvesant High School, New York, New York David Dengyu Wang, 17, Stuyvesant High School, New York, New York
Fair Description
The Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (Intel ISEF) (http://www.intel.com/education/isef/) is the world’s largest pre-college science competition that provides an opportunity for the world’s best young scientists and inventors to come together to share ideas, showcase cutting-edge science projects, and compete for more than U.S. $3 million in awards and scholarships.
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