Entrepreneur Alexandru Ionut Budisteanu spoke at KAUST's 2018 Winter Enrichment Program (WEP) about pursuing one's passion to achieve their dreams. Budisteanu shared his journey of creating video games and building an autonomous self-driving car prototype. He emphasized the importance of finding a job or activity that one loves and working with passion. Why it matters: Showcases KAUST's efforts to host inspiring speakers and promote entrepreneurship among students.
In a 2018 keynote, Saudi Aramco VP Nasser Al-Nafisee recounted the rapid construction of KAUST. Al-Nafisee described building KAUST in under three years as a "mission impossible" requiring immense effort. He advised KAUST attendees to push beyond their comfort zones and adopt a "can-do attitude". Why it matters: The talk highlights the ambitious vision and rapid development that characterize Saudi Arabia's investments in research and technology.
Dr. David Paredes from Drexel and Purdue Universities conducted a workshop on sustaining creativity at KAUST's 2015 Winter Enrichment Program. The workshop aimed to inspire students to be creative and remember why they entered their fields. Students used the Reisman Diagnostic Creativity Assessment tool to evaluate their creative strengths in ideation, risk tolerance, solution focus, and motivation. Why it matters: Such workshops, while not directly advancing AI research, foster a culture of innovation and risk-taking that is crucial for breakthroughs in AI and other STEM fields in the region.
KAUST's Dean of Biological and Environmental Science and Engineering, Prof. Pierre Magistretti, advised new students to focus on "big questions" in science. He emphasized curiosity, passion, and balancing self-criticism with confidence as guiding principles. Magistretti encouraged students to question existing paradigms and embrace uncertainty in their research. Why it matters: This guidance from a KAUST leader highlights the institution's focus on fostering innovative and impactful research among its students, which can contribute to advancements in science and technology in the region.
A new benchmark, LongShOTBench, is introduced for evaluating multimodal reasoning and tool use in long videos, featuring open-ended questions and diagnostic rubrics. The benchmark addresses the limitations of existing datasets by combining temporal length and multimodal richness, using human-validated samples. LongShOTAgent, an agentic system, is also presented for analyzing long videos, with both the benchmark and agent demonstrating the challenges faced by state-of-the-art MLLMs.