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Waterloo Undergrads Achieve Top 8 Finish at Berkeley AI Hackathon
A team of undergraduates from the University of Waterloo in Ontario were named “grand finalists” at this summer’s UC Berkeley AI Hackathon. The four students – Rajan Agarwal, Elijah Kurien, Ishaan Dey, and Joshua Yan – beat out nearly 1,200 competitors to achieve a Top 8 finish among the over 400 international teams competing.
The UC Berkeley AI Hackathon is an annual two-day event sponsored by UC Berkeley and Berkeley Skydeck, a university-run startup accelerator. The competition is open to student programmers from around the world, who are given 36 hours to develop a new project from scratch. Participants compete for the chance to win a $100,000 investment and exclusive networking opportunities with Bay Area tech leaders.
This year’s Hackathon was titled “AI for Good”, and encouraged participants to work on projects that address real-world problems. The Waterloo team’s entry was “Skyline”, a transit model which aims to reduce carbon emissions. The program analyzes transit routes by using machine learning and demographic data from the City of Los Angeles to model commuter behaviour. This allows it to optimize routes, increasing commuter efficiency and reducing pollution.
The Waterloo team weren’t the only Canadians present at the awards ceremony: Slovak-Canadian computer scientist Andrej Karpathy delivered the keynote speech. Karpathy was a co-founder of OpenAI, a leader in AI development research best known for creating ChatGPT. As finalists, the Waterloo team was invited to dinner with Karpathy. Now back in Canada, the team plans to continue to develop their project. They hope that Skyline could be adapted for use by urban planners and governments in other cities, potentially reducing transportation emissions by up to 18%.
Image: J. Yan, I. Dey, Andrej Karpathy, E. Kurien, and R. Agarwal. Source: Waterloo News. |