The 5th UQ-wide AI HDR Showcase was successfully hosted by the AI Research Network, Alina Bialkowski, Rocky Chen, Shazia Sadiq & Shane Culpepper on 10-11 June 2026, with 34 student presentations and over 100 attendees.
UQ is contributing to a new $94.6 million ARC Centre of Excellence examining how AI and automation can enhance work quality and worker well-being in a digital age.
New survey data reveals 94 per cent of Australians expect AI to meet aviation safety standards, but expert assessments show current AI development is 4,000 times riskier.
The Australian Centre for Student Equity and Success (ACSES) has released a national framework to guide how artificial intelligence is implemented in higher education, with key contributions from UQ academics.
The UQ Library hosted, Promises, Perils and Possibilities, a discussion on the challenges and possibilities of AI in research and scholarly publishing, with insights relevant to academic and research audiences.
UQ’s Queensland Digital Health Centre is leading a major international project to develop the DIGI-HEAL Framework, assessing AI training needs and building capability across Australian and UK health workforces.
UQ experts and industry leaders explore the key challenges of scaling AI from prototypes to real-world enterprise systems, including governance, organisational readiness and cross-sector collaboration.
The UQ AI Conference Dry Run Seminar Series is an initiative launched by the UQ EECS Data Science Discipline to support our HDR student community. This inaugural event marked the beginning of a recurring seminar series designed to help our students shine on the global stage.
Artificial intelligence is radically reshaping work, education and security in Australia, and is officially recognised as a critical technology in government policy. How we harness it will impact the nation’s economic prosperity, national security and continuing innovation.
The UQ AI Research Network was delighted to host guest speaker Professor Iyad Rahwan, Director, Max Planck Institute for Human Development. This session was organised by the Network's Human Centred AI focus area, and hosted by Professor Tim Miller.