Research

Overview

The School of Computer Science deeply integrates cutting-edge technology with national strategic needs, focusing on technological breakthroughs and applications for social welfare, and is dedicated to promoting interdisciplinary innovation and the development of key fields. After years of consolidation, it has established seven distinctive research directions: computer theory, computer architecture, parallel and distributed computing, computer networks, system software, information security and cryptography, and artificial intelligence (AI4S/AI4E). In recent years, faculty members have led more than 260 major national research projects, with a steady year-on-year increase in both the number of projects and funding, resulting in substantial research achievements. The school has received six national-level scientific and technological awards (including one International Science and Technology Cooperation Award and five National Science and Technology Second Prizes) and nineteen provincial and ministerial-level awards of first prize or higher. It hosts one national-level research center (National Engineering Research Center for Information Content Analysis Technology), eleven provincial and ministerial-level research centers, and nearly twenty ongoing university-enterprise joint laboratories. The school is systematically building world-class research capabilities.


Seven major research areas:
Theory of computation, computer architecture, parallel and distributed computing, computer networks, system software, information security and cryptography, artificial intelligence (AI4S/AI4E).