Students Starting Autumn 2010

New students from Autumn 2010 click here

 

Computer Science, Loughborough

Founded in 1974, the Department of Computer Science was among the first university computing departments to be established in Great Britain. The Research School of Informatics was established in December 2004 as part of a new £100M University expansion in a number of areas. It is located in a new building equipped to the highest standards. The school's mission is research excellence founded upon the strengths of research groups in the departments of Computer Science and Information Science.

Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) 2008

The results of the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE), published in December, have confirmed Loughborough as one of the country's leading research universities.

Computer Science Department

90% of the Department's research is of an international standard (rated 2*, 3* or 4* in the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise) as classified under the Computer Science and Informatics category.

TEACHING QUALITY ASSESSMENT

In 2003 the Department received the highest available commendation for its teaching quality from the Quality Assurance Agency. In the first national poll of how satisfied final year students were with their degree course - the National Student Survey (2005) - Loughborough topped the table for overall satisfaction and also for learning resources and organisation and management. The survey placed the Department of Computer Science at Loughborough top of the league for the most satisfied computing students among 81 participating computing departments in the country (Times Higher, 23 September 2005). In 2006 the Department was placed 3rd overall and, when considering results over the last two years, places the Department first out of 84 departments.

National Student Survey

News

July 2010 - PhD Students who have sucessfully defended their thesis

Congratulations to Omar Omar who successfully passed his PhD viva. His thesis title was, "The effects of computer aided thinking (CAT) software on achievement and learning experience in biochemistry unit of twelfth grade students in Khalifa School in Abu Dhabi."

Congratulations to Sion Scone who successfully passed his PhD viva. His thesis title was, "Opportunistic Communication Schemes for Unmanned Vehicles in Urban Search and Rescue."

Congratualtions to Rizwan Faiz who successfully passed his PhD viva. His thesis title was, "Empirical Rail Track Degradation Model Based on Predictive Analysis of Rail Profile and Track Geometry."

Entrepreneur blown away by business acumen of Loughborough University Students

A unique partnership between Loughborough University and a leading entrepreneur has resulted in more than 60 students being offered work contracts after they graduate.


The Department of Computer Science enlisted the help of businessman Adrian Gill to inspire and challenge students taking the 'E-Business Planning and Marketing' module. Mr Gill, who is currently the Midlands regional sales manager for Everest, had a number of internet-based business ideas that he wanted to pursue and asked the students to help develop his ideas. Click HERE for the complete press release

ITMB student wins Loughborough University Employability Award

Andrew Richardson, final year ITMB student at Loughborough University, has received the 2010 Loughborough University Employability Award. It is the latest success story to come out of the e-skills UK ITMB degree programme, proving that it really is equipping students with the business and personal skills that employers are so eager to find in technology graduates. Read on...

Enterprise Award Finalists

We are delighted to anounce that the Department of Computer Science is one of a number of departments within the University which has been nominated for this years's Awards which will be presented by the Chancellor Sir Nigel Rudd on 6th October 2010. The winners are to be decided by a public online vote that closes at midnight on 15th September. Voting is open to members of the university and externally.

Inaugural Lecture - Professor Chris Hinde,
Jam tomorrow - a view of computational intelligence

Computational intelligence is concerned with three major areas: Fuzzy and Vague Reasoning, Neural Networks and Evolutionary Systems. Work in Fuzzy Systems has involved reasoning with and about contradictions and inconsistencies. Contradictions drive knowledge forward and can be used to discover structure. "Jam tomorrow" is a bi-lingual oxymoron. Jam is latin for now, and contradicts tomorrow..........

Inaugural Lecture - Professor Alastair Gale,
Bustin' in on my dreams - making me see things I don't wanna see

The title of this lecture is taken from Fleetwood Mac's ''The Green Manalishi' and aptly describes the challenges in translating to reality Professor Gale's research dreams; together with his facination with encouraging people to see things they often fail to see.........

2010 Student Poster Competition

The winners of the 2010 Student Poster Competition are as follows:

Chris Parker - Winner of the Best  Poster in Three Departments prize (£200);
Andrew Leonce - Winner of the Second prize in Three Departments (£150);
Shena P Taylor - Winner of the Commendation prize in ESRI (£100);
Sarogini Manuel - Winner of the Commendation prize in CS (£100);
Marianne Bamkin - Winner of the Commendation prize in DIS (£100).

Opening of Usability Lab

The Research School of Informatics working with the Department of Computer Science, Ergonomics and Safety Research Institute, and the Department of Information Science have established a Usability Lab with money allocated from the Research Capital Investment Fund. The Lab was officially opened by Professor Ken Parsons, Pro-Vice-Chancellor of Research on 9th December 2009. The Lab is equipped with a range of state-of-the-art facilities for investigating human-computer interaction. See photos of the opening and some of the facilitities - click here

Finalist, IET Innovation Awards 2009

A joint project between BAE Systems, Loughborough University and Aberystwyth University, was one of the finalists of the IET Innovation Awards 2009. There to attend the award ceremony on 25th November 2009 at the Nursery Pavilion, Lords' Cricket Ground and to receive a certificate of recognition from the IET were Dr John Pearson (SEIC), Mr Clive Downes (BAE Systems) and Professor Paul Chung (Director, Research School of Informatics). The ASTRAEA project developed a systems framework for integrated vehicle health management and advisory systems for uninhabited air vehicles (UAV's).Innovation Award

The 2009 Enterprise Awards

The Consultancy Award for Enterprise was presented to Professor Alastair Gale, head of the Applied Vision Research Centre for PERFORMS ('PERsonal perFORmance in Mammographic Screening'). PERFORMS has been playing a critical role in improving and maintaining the diagnosis of breast cancer since the NHS began breast screening over 20 years ago and it is planned to licence variations of the scheme worldwide. The evening was a double celebration for Alastair and his team as it has just been confirmed that £1.2M over four years has been awarded from the NHS for the continuation of PERFORMS.

IEEE Best Student Paper

PhD student Martin Sykora was awarded the Best Student Paper Award at the 3rd IEEE SOFA 2009 (International Workshop on Soft
Computing and Applications 2009), held in Szeged (Hungary)/Arad (Romania), 29th July - 1st August 2009. All student papers were considered for best IEEE SOFA 2009 student paper award.

2009 Student Poster Competition

The winners of the 2009 Student Poster Competition are as follows:

Tareq Alhmeidat - Winner of the Best  Poster in Three Departments prize (£200);
Sion Scone - Winner of the Second prize in Three Departments (£150);
Chris Parker - Winner of the Commendation prize in ESRI (£100);
Jonathan Farnsworth - Winner of the Commendation prize in CS (£100);
Rachael Lindsay - Winner of the Commendation prize in DIS (£100).

Industrial Placement Student Receives Employee Recognition Award

In November 2008, only 5 months after starting work with JP Morgan, industrial placement student Jamie Dumbill was nominated for an Employee Recognigtion Award. The purpose of this is to reward and recognise employees for significant performance accomplishments, extraordinary efforts creativity, innovation and leadership consistent with JP Morgan values that result in improved productivity, profitabilty or recognition of JP Morgan in the marketplace or community.
The nature of the accomplishment being rewarded falls outside the scope of an individual's normal job responsibilities, for which they receive incentive compensation and immediate recognition from peers and senior managment. Jamie is the only intern who has received such an award.

Best Student Paper

Computer Science student, Hesham Abusaimeh won the best student paper prize at the 14th International Conference on Automation and Computing, London on 6th September 2008. His paper is titled 'Dynamic cluster head for lifetime efficiency in WSN (wireless sensor networks).''