Northwestern Announces Plans for Major Expansion in Computer Science
New faculty members in core, joint areas will boost research and educational opportunities
With student demand and research opportunities in computer science skyrocketing, Northwestern University today announced it will hire an additional 20 faculty members and substantially expand its commitment to this field in the years ahead. Half of the new faculty appointments will be in core computer science areas and half structured as collaborative “CS+X” appointments with other disciplines. The University is making initial investments in advance of fundraising to support the overall effort, which is expected to exceed $150 million.
“This is an investment in the future of the University. Computer science has become a foundational discipline for many of our students, and faculty across the University are increasingly using computational thinking,” Northwestern President Morton Schapiro said. “It is important for Northwestern to continue to enable new paths for exploration. The time is right to make this commitment.”
Interest in computer science among students at Northwestern has increased significantly. In the last five years, the number of computer science majors has more than tripled. Overall course enrollments have more than doubled, with non-majors taking many advanced classes. Basic computer science skills have become a prerequisite for many jobs for new graduates, and demand for such knowledge will only increase in the future.
“Through this investment, computer science at Northwestern will meet the challenge of ensuring students have the necessary skills they need to do great things in the world,” Northwestern Provost Daniel Linzer said. “This will have far-reaching implications. Not only can we advance computer science at Northwestern, but we can advance Northwestern through computer science.”
Computer science and computational thinking have the potential to touch nearly every field at the University. The explosion of available data combined with increased computing power has resulted in research growth in areas such as artificial intelligence and machine learning, robotics and data analytics. While this has led to a wealth of new research within computer science, the power of the field lies in its ability to provide new collaborations and points of view to many academic disciplines. This collaboration has a long history at the University: Several Northwestern computer science professors have joint appointments in areas such as music, journalism and education, and many of the new faculty positions will be at new intersections of disciplines. These CS+X appointments will accelerate collaborative research.
“The power of computer science lies in augmenting our thinking and in its ability to accelerate research exponentially in other areas,” said Julio M. Ottino, dean of the McCormick School of Engineering. “Even areas as diverse as art, economics, medicine and political science can benefit from integrating computational thinking into their research and education. The possibilities are endless.”
One recent success is at the intersection of computer science and journalism. Narrative Science, a company founded by computer science professors Kristian Hammond and Larry Birnbaum, offers an artificial intelligence service that extracts the most important information from a data source and turns it into a narrative using natural language. The underlying program resulted from a collaboration among the two professors, their students and students from the Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications.
Other Northwestern computer science professors also have been successful in bringing their research advances to the market. 4C, a data science company that helps agencies, brands and television networks plan, measure and execute advertising campaigns more effectively, was founded by computer science professor Alok Choudhary. 4C’s algorithm tracks trillions of data points that reflect the behaviors of more than 1 billion consumers worldwide, including within social networks. It counts among its customers 400 of the Fortune 1000 companies.
To encourage this kind of research, computer science has been bolstered recently by several gifts to We Will. The Campaign for Northwestern. Dennis Chookaszian, an alumnus and life trustee, and his wife, Karen Chookaszian, made a commitment of $6.5 million to establish the Chookaszian Family Program in Computer Science, which will support faculty, students and research at the intersection of computer science and learning. Peter Barris, a Northwestern alumnus and trustee, and his wife, Adrienne Barris, gave a $5 million gift to endow a new professorship in the department of electrical engineering and computer science. Additionally, the McCormick Advisory Council supported a visiting professorship through a group gift last year. Endowed chairs require gifts of $3 million to $5 million and are named for the benefactors.
The funds raised through the “We Will” Campaign are helping realize the transformational vision set forth in Northwestern’s strategic plan and solidify the University’s position among the world’s leading research universities. More information on We Will. The Campaign for Northwestern is available at wewill.northwestern.edu.