logo
KLH bachupally Kicks Off Global Conference on Generative AI and Computational Intelligence

KLH bachupally Kicks Off Global Conference on Generative AI and Computational Intelligence

Hans India17-07-2025
KLH Bachupally proudly inaugurated the International Conference on Mathematical Modeling in Computational Intelligence and Generative AI (Math-CIGAI 2025) today.
The two-day global conference, taking place from July 17–18, 2025, stands as a flagship initiative driving cutting-edge research in Artificial Intelligence, optimization strategies, and the rapidly evolving applications of Generative AI in healthcare.
Hosted at the Bowrampet campus, the event brings together a distinguished gathering of international and national experts, academicians, researchers, and professionals, who will engage in deep discussions around mathematical modeling, machine intelligence, and emerging AI technologies.
With Generative AI playing an increasingly critical role in sectors like healthcare, the conference will spotlight its applications in medical image generation, disease diagnostics, data augmentation, and privacy-preserving AI systems. Participants can look forward to keynote sessions, research paper presentations, expert panels, and global networking opportunities.
The conference features renowned thought leaders including Prof. Dipti Prasad Mukherjee (Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata) and Prof. Young-Cheol Byun (Jeju National University, South Korea), along with speakers and advisors from countries such as Italy, Turkey, USA, South Korea, Sweden, China, Australia, and Nepal, reflecting KLH's growing international academic footprint.
Speaking on the occasion, Er. Koneru Lakshman Havish, Vice President of KL Deemed to be University, stated, 'Math- CIGAI 2025 opens a vital dialogue between technology and society. This platform celebrates interdisciplinary collaboration, encourages innovation, and reaffirms our commitment to nurturing future-ready researchers and professionals.'
The conference is being organized under the guidance of Dr. L. Koteshwara Rao, Principal, KLH, along with convenors and enthusiastic support from the university's academic and administrative teams.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump administration asks US Supreme Court to allow NIH diversity-related cuts
Trump administration asks US Supreme Court to allow NIH diversity-related cuts

Time of India

time3 days ago

  • Time of India

Trump administration asks US Supreme Court to allow NIH diversity-related cuts

New York: Donald Trump's administration asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday to allow the government to proceed with sweeping cuts to National Institutes of Health grants as part of the Republican president's crackdown on diversity initiatives. The Justice Department asked the justices to lift Boston-based U.S. District Judge William Young's June ruling that halted the plan as a violation of federal law and required the government to reinstate access to the grant funds. The judge acted in a legal challenge by researchers and 16 U.S. states, led by Democratic-governed Massachusetts. The NIH is the world's largest funder of biomedical research. The cuts are part of Trump's wide-ranging actions to reshape the U.S. government, slash federal spending and end government support for diversity, equity and inclusion programs and transgender healthcare. The administration repeatedly has sought the Supreme Court's intervention to allow implementation of Trump policies impeded by lower courts. The Supreme Court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, has sided with the administration in almost every case that it has been called upon to review since Trump returned to the presidency in January. In June, dozens of scientists, researchers and other NIH employees signed an open letter criticizing the agency's actions and spending cuts under Trump that they said politicize research and "harm the health of Americans and people across the globe." Young's ruling came in two lawsuits challenging the cuts. One was filed by the American Public Health Association, individual researchers and other plaintiffs who called the cuts an "ongoing ideological purge" of projects with a purported connection to gender identity, DEI "or other vague, now-forbidden language." The other was filed by the states, most of them Democratic-led. Young, an appointee of Republican former President Ronald Reagan, invalidated the grant terminations in June. The judge wrote that every new administration is entitled to make policy changes but that these must be reasonable and reasonably explained. Instead, according to the judge, the steps taken by Trump administration officials were "breathtakingly arbitrary and capricious," violating a federal law governing the actions of agencies. Young criticized administration officials for not offering any definition of DEI while disparaging studies they deemed low-value and unscientific that the officials claimed were used to unlawfully discriminate on the basis of race and other protected characteristics. "There is not a shred of evidence supporting any of these statements in the record," Young wrote. Many U.S. conservatives contend that DEI policies discriminate against white people. The Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on July 18 denied the administration's request to put Young's decision on hold. The administration has argued that the litigation should have been brought in a different judicial body, the Washington-based Court of Federal Claims, which specializes in money damages claims against the U.S. government. That reasoning was also the basis for the Supreme Court's decision in April that let Trump's administration proceed with millions of dollars of cuts to teacher training grants also targeted under the DEI crackdown.

Trump Admin Asks US Supreme Court to Reinstate $783 Million In Research Funding Cuts
Trump Admin Asks US Supreme Court to Reinstate $783 Million In Research Funding Cuts

NDTV

time3 days ago

  • NDTV

Trump Admin Asks US Supreme Court to Reinstate $783 Million In Research Funding Cuts

Washington: The Trump administration asked the Supreme Court on Thursday to allow it to cut hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of research funding in its push to roll back federal diversity, equity and inclusion efforts. The Justice Department argued a federal judge in Massachusetts was wrong to block the National Institutes of Health from making $783 million worth of cuts to align with President Donald Trump's priorities. US District Judge William Young found that the abrupt cancellations ignored long-held government rules and standards. Young, an appointee of Republican President Ronald Reagan, also said the cuts amounted to "racial discrimination and discrimination against America's LGBTQ community." "I've never seen government racial discrimination like this," Young said at a hearing last month. An appeals court left the ruling in place. The ruling came in lawsuits filed by 16 attorneys general, public-health advocacy groups and some affected scientists. His decision addressed only a fraction of the hundreds of NIH research projects that have been cut. The Trump administration's appeal also takes aim at nearly two dozen cases over funding. Solicitor General D. John Sauer pointed to a 5-4 decision on the Supreme Court's emergency docket from April that allowed cuts to teacher training programs to go forward. The order shows that district judges shouldn't be hearing those cases at all, but rather sending them to federal claims court, he argued. "Those decisions reflect quintessential policy judgments on hotly contested issues that should not be subject to judicial second-guessing. It is hardly irrational for agencies to recognize-as members of this Court have done-that paeans to 'diversity' often conceal invidious racial discrimination," he wrote.

South Korea sees rare baby boom as marriages rise and policies take root
South Korea sees rare baby boom as marriages rise and policies take root

First Post

time4 days ago

  • First Post

South Korea sees rare baby boom as marriages rise and policies take root

The surge follows South Korea's first annual increase in births in more than a decade, which was fuelled by an increase in marriages. In 2024, the number of babies increased by 8,300, or 3.6%, to 238,300 from the previous year read more South Korea registered record birth rate growth during the first five months of the year. File image/ AFP South Korea's birth rate increased at a record pace in the first five months of the year, according to a statistics agency official who spoke with AFP on Wednesday. The country has one of the world's highest life expectancies and lowest birth rates, posing a significant demographic concern. Seoul has invested billions of dollars in programs to encourage women to have more children and maintain population stability. 'The number of newborns for the January–May period stood at 106,048, a 6.9 percent increase, the highest growth rate since such data collection began in 1981,' said Kang hyun-young from Statistics Korea. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD The surge follows South Korea's first annual increase in births in more than a decade, which was fuelled by an increase in marriages. In 2024, the number of babies increased by 8,300, or 3.6%, to 238,300 from the previous year. April in particular saw a jump, with year-on-year increase of 8.7 percent and a total of 20,717 births that month. The most recent result represents a dramatic contrast to early 2024, when the number of newborns fell by 2.7% from the previous year between January and May. In May, the fertility rate, or average number of kids a woman is projected to have in her lifetime, was 0.75. The country needs a fertility rate of 2.1 children in order to maintain the country's population of 51 million. At current rates, the population will nearly halve to 26.8 million by 2100, according to the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington in Seattle. Marriage correlation The increase is attributable 'to a rise in the number of women in their early 30s, leading to an overall increase in marriages', Kang told AFP. 'In South Korea, there is a strong correlation between marriage and childbirth, which has driven the increase in births during the first five months,' she added. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD In 2024, the country saw a 14.8 percent on-year increase in the number of marriages, with more than 220,000 couples tying the knot. Many government benefits designed to support child-rearing do not cover parents who are not legally married. Analysts say there are multiple reasons for the low birth rate, from high child-rearing costs and property prices to a notoriously competitive society that makes well-paid jobs difficult to secure. The double burden for working mothers of managing the brunt of household chores and childcare while also maintaining their careers is another key factor, they say. In a bid to reverse the trend, the South Korean government offers cash subsidies, babysitting services, and support for infertility treatment. Neighbouring Japan is grappling with the same issue – it has the world's second-oldest population after Monaco, and the country's relatively strict immigration rules mean it faces growing labour shortages.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store