Skip Navigation
MarylandToday

Produced by the Office of Marketing and Communications

Subscribe Now
Research

UMD Hiring 40 Faculty Members for AI Institute

Planned Faculty Expansion Among Largest in University History

By Allison Eatough ’97

A robot hand and a human hand touch a glowing orb

UMD will hire 40 faculty in fields across its colleges and schools to help advance the next generation of artificial intelligence (AI) technology, focusing on core research areas of accessibility, sustainability, social justice and learning.

Photo by iStock

The University of Maryland on Thursday announced one of the largest faculty expansions in its history, with plans to hire 40 faculty in fields across its colleges and schools to help advance the next generation of artificial intelligence (AI) technology, education and leaders.

The new faculty members will support the Artificial Intelligence Interdisciplinary Institute at Maryland (AIM), a collaborative hub launched last spring to conduct research, offer innovative and experiential learning opportunities for students and focus on responsible and ethical AI technology to advance the public good. UMD and its philanthropic and industry partners plan to invest more than $100 million in the institute over the next 10 years.

“Interdisciplinary collaboration is a hallmark of our institute, as we are dedicated to both the computer science side of AI and how the technology is studied and used in everything from the arts and education to journalism, business, engineering and social sciences like psychology, political science, and gender and women’s studies,” said Hal Daumé III, AIM director and a Volpi-Cupal Family Endowed Professor in the Department of Computer Science. “We are looking for faculty who will bring diverse backgrounds, experiences and perspectives to our campus to help ensure we are considering this rapidly evolving field from every possible angle.”

AIM will include new AI majors, AI certificates, graduate degrees, workforce development programs and a new high-performance computing cluster tailored for AI’s complex computational challenges.

While their backgrounds will vary, new faculty members must have a strong research interest in one of AIM’s four core areas: accessibility, sustainability, social justice and learning. They will join 100-plus faculty members who already study and teach AI at UMD, the nation’s No. 5 public school for the discipline, according to U.S. News & World Report’s influential 2025 “Best Colleges” guide.

“The University of Maryland and the state of Maryland are committed to responsibly advancing AI technology and preparing students from every field of study for a technology-rich world,” said UMD Senior Vice President and Provost Jennifer King Rice. “The addition of 40 new faculty members across disciplines further illustrates that commitment and positions our university as a global leader for cutting-edge AI education and research.”

Topics:

Research

Maryland Today is produced by the Office of Marketing and Communications for the University of Maryland community on weekdays during the academic year, except for university holidays.