91ÁÔĆć

Computer Science Doctoral Students Shine at International AI Conference

From Houston to Vienna, UH computer science students make a global impact with AI research.

Ph.D. students from the 91ÁÔĆć Department of Computer Science are earning international recognition for their research in artificial intelligence and natural language processing.  

Dana Alsagheer, Michael Yantosca and ChengAo Shen had papers accepted as first authors to the held in Vienna, Austria—one of the world’s leading conferences in computational linguistics and AI. 

Dana Alsagheer Dana Alsagheer

Alsagheer and her co-authors published The paper explores the importance of consistency and fairness in developing trustworthy artificial intelligence systems.


Michael Yantosca Michael Yantosca

Yantosca, working with faculty advisor Albert M. K. Cheng, presented The research introduces an efficient, language-independent method for tokenizing speech in real time, advancing applications in multilingual speech recognition, language documentation, and assistive technologies in low-resource settings. 


ChengAo Shen ChengAo Shen

Shen, along with his collaborators, published Their findings demonstrate how large language model agents can enhance causal inference across complex data systems. 

“These papers represent the exceptional research contributions of our students and faculty in advancing artificial intelligence and machine learning,” said Lennart Johnsson, interim chair of the Department of Computer Science. “Their work not only demonstrates technical excellence but also reflects UH’s growing impact on global AI research.” 

The department congratulates Alsagheer, Yantosca and Shen, along with their faculty advisors, Weidong “Larry” Shi, Cheng and Jingchao Ni, for their accomplishments.

Top Stories