www-team  cs.cmu.edu
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CServeS: Computing in Service to Society
CServeS (pronounced "serves")
showcases some of the outreach/societal projects and activities
that are being developed and implemented in the Carnegie Mellon
School of Computer Science.
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Assistive Technology & Accessibility.
This class will focus on computer accessibility, including web and
desktop computing, and research in the area of assistive technology.
Students will be expected to do service work with non-profits serving
the local disability community during one to two weekends of the start
of the semester. This course (05-899 section J) has a project component,
where students will design, implement, and test software for people
with disabilities. Contact person: Jen Mankoff,
jmankoff @cs.cmu.edu |
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The Center for Appalachian
Network Access (CANA) is a philanthropic effort based in the School
of Computer Science. CANA's mission is assist underserved Appalachian
communities acquire and use high speed internet access. CANA has projects
in WV and SW PA where we send teams of CS faculity and students to
install the network and perform community outreach and education.
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Project LISTEN
is developing an automated Reading Tutor that listens
to children read aloud. The Reading Tutor adapts Carnegie Mellon's
Sphinx-II speech recognizer to analyze the student's oral reading.
The Reading Tutor responds with assistance modelled in part after
expert reading teachers, but adapted to the capabilities and limitations
of the technology. Though not (yet) a commercial product, the Reading
Tutor is being used daily at elementary schools to test its effectiveness. |
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Ph.D. program in Computation, Organizations
and Society (COS) The past decade has seen a tremendous increase
in both the breadth and the complexity of computational systems society
has come to rely on. This increase in turn is giving rise to a number
of new and challenging societal, management and policy issues, which
themselves often call for new technological innovations. Examples
include digital rights management, social interaction management,
data privacy technology, electronic market mechanisms, dynamic social
network modeling, etc. Attacking these new problems requires a deep
understanding of computation and of the interplay between the managerial,
personal and policy networks in which technology operates. The Ph.D.
Program in Computation, Organizations and Society (COS) prepares students
to be tomorrow's leaders in constructing software that is accountable
to society, business, policy, and law. As part of constructing such
computational technology, students engage in evaluating and understanding
the implications of technology with respect to social, corporate,
legal or policy concerns. The result is technology that is easier
to adopt and more responsible to the environment in which it operates.
The result is an improved understanding the complex socio-technical
world that we inhabit. |
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The TechBridgeWorld
innovates and implements technology solutions to meet sustainable
development needs around the world through strong collaborations with
partners in developing communities. TechBridgeWorld offers courses,
independent studies, internships, and seminars in which students,
faculty, and staff can participate. |
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