.@UofTCompSci Professor @ArvindUofT — a member of the federal AI task force — weighs in on Canada’s AI strategy: why building public trust and turning world-class AI research into economic impact are both critical. ⤵️https://t.co/oabsJV6P3H
Seeing research come to life 👀
Kelly Zhu, MSc graduate in computer science, works across AI, robotics and computer vision — and shares what comes next ↓
https://t.co/tTpN7GJ44I
Geoffrey Hinton, University Professor Emeritus and winner of a Nobel Prize in Physics, granted an honorary degree by Harvard University #UofT
https://t.co/6ktD0iuJfv
#UofTReunion is back! Registration is now open for all your favourite alumni events. From June 14–20, 2026, it’s a full week of tri-campus fun and reconnecting with old friends.
Consider this your excuse to come visit campus again! See what’s on: https://t.co/ZOs7YDuCdp
Raquel Urtasun has been elected a Fellow of the Royal Society — one of the highest honours in science.
A @UofTCompSci professor, AI leader and founder of @Waabi_ai, she joins a global cohort recognized for advancing scientific knowledge.
https://t.co/RdIXyE4ZMi
Professor Emeritus Eugene Fiume has received a 2025 CS‑Can | Info‑Can Lifetime Achievement Award, recognizing his sustained contributions to computer graphics research and computer science education at @uoft and beyond.
https://t.co/s95ZVa8Wfn
Congratulations to AC Director & @UofT Prof. Alán Aspuru-Guzik, who is featured in @BetaKit Most Ambitious 2026, an annual list recognizing Canada’s most ambitious researchers, companies and community-builders!
https://t.co/zLAsQu9kYe #TorontoTechWeek
Working through and refining a single problem, CS and math specialist Boyan Litchev finished the 2025 Putnam Competition as the highest @uoft scorer.
The undergrad shares how he found meaning in the challenge and a deeper connection to the subject. 🔗https://t.co/RagOq2sKrR
Congratulations to @UofTCompSci and @UofTMScAC recipients of the @VectorInst Scholarship in AI for 2026! The funding supports top grad students pursuing AI-related studies while connecting them to a powerful ecosystem of mentors and industry leaders.
Introducing the 2026-27 Vector Scholarship in AI recipients! 🌟
We're thrilled to announce 100 exceptional graduate students across Ontario have each received a $17,500 scholarship – $1.75 million invested in Canada's AI future.
This year's cohort comes from 13 universities, spanning computer science, engineering, health informatics, data science, and business. Now in its ninth year, the program has supported more than 900 students at Ontario universities since 2018.
"We're proud to support 100 exceptional students this year with $17,500 scholarships, but the real value of the Vector Scholarship in AI is the powerful ecosystem they join. From day one, recipients are connected to mentors, peers and industry leaders who help transform them from graduate students into the researchers, entrepreneurs and practitioners who will define the next decade of AI in this province." – Melissa Judd, VP, Research Operations and Academic Partnerships, Vector Institute
Congratulations to all of this year’s recipients and all the best in your incredible journeys ahead.
Learn more at https://t.co/u7tOPePpx2
From the birthplace of modern AI to real-world impact.
In the latest issue of University of Toronto Magazine, @uoft President Melanie Woodin shares why putting AI innovation to work—and integrating the technology thoughtfully—matters now. #CIW26
https://t.co/hYQK3faJks
Only a few weeks away! Join our #UofT x #TorontoTechWeek event on May 26 with Reynold Xin, co-founder of Databricks, on his journey building a $100B+ company, followed by a lawn party on front campus. Save your spot & explore more Toronto Tech Week events: https://t.co/sXJC5jiMNb
From the archives to a galaxy far, far away — revisit this @uoftartsci spotlight on CS alum and animation innovator Bill Reeves. #MayThe4thBeWithYou https://t.co/lRXIPEre4K
What keeps alumni coming back to mentor @UofT computer science students? For alumnus Jason Lee, it’s the conversations — and the chance to help students find their direction.
https://t.co/hYpt5kSGlU
From accessible speech‑to‑text tools to embodied AI systems for robotics, students showcased the range of work underway in @UofTCompSci at the Software Engineering Showcase.
Projects from CSC301 and CSC490 reflected real‑world partnerships and applied research.