The UNT AI/CS Summer Research Program brings together students from a variety of AI-related academic programs to supplement their traditional course-based educational experiences with focused, project-oriented research efforts.
A unique aspect of this program is the immersive 10-week effort which guides students through all stages from initial project selection to research poster presentation. This is accomplished through intensive group efforts, including brief daily full group meetings ("huddles") and daily project group meetings lead by faculty and grad students. The intensive period culminates in a celebration and poster presentation event on the final Friday. This initial period demonstrates what can be accomplished with well-organized, focused, and intensive group effort, and accelerates the student preparation for more independent efforts throughout the summer and into the next academic year. We accept students with both AI and general interests in computing.
Sections below:
- Key dates
- Summary of the 2025 program
- Who can apply?
- Application
- Past summer programs
- Contact information
- Related links
- FAQ (frequently asked questions)
KEY DATES
- Application opens: Monday, February 24, 2025.
- Application deadline: Saturday, March 15, 2025 (the application link is found later in this page).
- Acceptances are emailed by: Friday, April 4, 2025.
- Project selection FOR ALL SESSIONS 9am-12pm, Monday, May 19, 2025. Choices to be made online before 3pm.
- Regular 10-week session: (10am-11:30am and 2pm-3:30pm): Tuesday, May 20 - Friday, July 25.
- End of program presentations and poster session: Friday, July 25, 2025.
MOST RECENT PROGRAM
Accessible only to participants in the AI Summer Program 2025 (through the associated google group) |
|
WHO CAN APPLY?
A variety of UNT student and faculty populations are integrated in the program, with some participation more formally arranged than others. The includes faculty, PhD students, MS students, and undergrads including TAMS. The "How to Apply" section details general expectations for all students. Each of the participating groups has additional expectations, requirements, or enrollment limits described below.
MS students (AI, Data Engineering, AI-oriented CS or CE) |
Students in this group are required to sign up for CSCE 5934: Directed Study credit under one of the program coordinators if accepted - check your degree program if such credit assists toward graduation. Only those selected for the program will be able to sign up for course credit. |
MS students in other Colleges (e.g. Information, Business, Science, etc) or Engineering departments |
Given current resources, 10-15 students in these colleges or other departments will be selected. Proficiency in programming and diversity of skills will be used in selection. |
TAMS students |
NOTE: The TAMS Summer Research Scholarship deadline was early this year (2025) and decisions have already been made on support. Early Summer Research TAMS students (those just beginning the 2 year TAMS program) are particularly encouraged to apply to jump-start engagement in research. 5-10 TAMS students will be selected. TAMS students who are also selected for the TAMS Summer Research Scholarship will be required to be at Discovery Park at least 30 hrs/week following the 10 week summer class schedule, as the program requires 10 weeks of participation. |
Undergraduates (non-TAMS) |
Undergraduate special topics course options are possible with one of the coordinators. Up to 10 UNT undergraduates (not in TAMS) will be accepted. |
Ph.D. students |
Do not apply to the program in the same manner as other students; however, Ph.D. students conducting AI-related research that can benefit from engaged, focused, and well-managed AI students are strongly encouraged to present their project idea to one of the program coordinators well before the first day of the summer program as an option for program students to sign up. If a Ph.D. student's project is selected, they will be expected to help advise the group pursuing that project with almost daily contact during the relevant program session. |
Faculty |
Faculty with project ideas are also encouraged to contact one of the coordinators who maintain a curated list of project titles, abstracts, and resources that the students in the AI summer program select among on the first day. Note: The day-to-day project planning, meeting, and advising are provided by the program coordinators and participating graduate students. It is suggested, though not required, that faculty providing project ideas or support are available for contact by project groups at least once/week over the summer for feedback. In our experience, the ideal project options provided by faculty are well-defined problems with data readily available that students can pursue relatively independently, with only daily assistance by a coordinator or knowledgable grad student. Additionally, students have to choose it on the first day so it must be appealing among the options available, and all project options presented are expected to lead to external impact. |
APPLICATION
Review the following requirements and make sure you meet them before proceeding to the application:
Availability
- You are available without extensive interruption for both the morning and afternoon sessions every workday in the 10 weeks of the program.
- In-person attendance is required. You should not be taking concurrent summer classes during your session given demands of the program.
Experience expectations
- You must be actively completing a degree program at UNT or through a previous arrangement with the coordinators.
- You have substantial programming experience, ideally Python.
- For CSE MS students only, you have taken an introductory AI/Machine Learning/Data Science course (e.g. you can explain what "cross validation" is, and why it's useful - or you understand train/validation/test splits).
- Your GPA at UNT must be 3.0 or higher, and you must have completed at least one semester of courses at UNT prior to the summer.
- If you are a TAMS student: these are not requirements - though similar experience is encouraged.
Materials to prepare before submission
- Prepare a Resume or CV for upload for the online application.
After reviewing and preparing the above materials, please complete the online form
Application form due by Saturday, March 15, 2025 (note: a google account will be needed for verification)
CONTACT
Any questions, comments, or concerns please email one of the summer program coordinators: Mark Albert at mark.albert@unt.edu or Ting Xiao at ting.xiao@unt.edu. If it is not urgent, please allow up to two workdays for a response.
PAST YEARS
The coordinators have been running summer research programs in AI and CS continuously since 2015 (moving to UNT in Fall 2019) with over 200 students and 50+ projects total so far. Here are the following program summaries which include brief program descriptions, research posters, participants, and pictures.
- Summer 2024 - 53 students, 17 projects, 13 participating faculty (UNT)
- Summer 2023 - 58 students, 18 projects, 9 participating faculty (UNT)
- Summer 2022 - 56 students, 17 projects, 8 participating faculty (UNT)
- Summer 2021 - 48 students, 15 projects, 9 participating faculty (UNT)
- Summer 2020 - 22 students, 9 projects, 10 participating faculty (UNT, primarily TAMS due to COVID-19)
- Summer 2019 - 30 students, 9 projects, 5 participating faculty (Loyola CS)
- Summer 2018 - 28 students, 10 projects, 8 participating faculty (Loyola CS)
- Summer 2017 - 23 students, 7 projects, 8 participating faculty (Loyola CS)
- Summer 2016 - 30 students, 12 projects, 6 participating faculty (Loyola CS)
- Summer 2015 - 19 students, 5 projects, 2 participating faculty (Loyola CS)
RELATED LINKS
- Application form - Deadline March 15, 2025
- Additional AI Summer Experiences available
- UNT AI4All (for non-CSE UNT undergraduates - underrepresented groups strongly encouraged to sign up)
- NSF REU for Creating and Sharing Vector Embeddings (for undergraduate US citizens or permanent residents)
FAQ'S
- I have a question about the program, who do I ask?
Any questions, comments, or concerns please email one of the coordinators: Mark Albert at mark.albert@unt.edu or Ting Xiao at ting.xiao@unt.edu. - Do I need to take a research course with this?
We expect students to be signed up for an appropriate research course (e.g., CSCE 5934: Directed Study if an MS student in CSE). This is required for CSE students, but for students outside CSE there may be flexibility. Coordinators will reach out to help you sign up for the appropriate course and explain expectations for grading, but it is ultimately the responsibility of the student to determine if the course counts toward their graduation requirements. Students will not be treated differently in the program based on whether or not they are enrolled in course credit. Attendance expectations are clearly more important with course credit on the line, and a lack of participation is generally the only way this course grading would be affected. - But what if I am not as interesting in AI - I just want to participate in this environment?
That is perfectly fine. We also have CS-focussed projects about developing software, as well as more AI focussed project efforts. In fact, traditionally there have always been projects with a development focus in addition to AI model building/validation/testing. This is why we may refer to the program as the UNT AI/CS Summer Research Program.