Duke Engineering Celebrates the Class of 2026
On Sunday, May 10, 2026, Duke Engineering celebrated over 1,200 graduates from its various programs.
On Sunday, May 10, 2026, Duke Engineering celebrated over 1,200 graduates from its various programs.
Duke Engineering's co-op program embeds master's students in full-time professional roles for up to a year, building the skills, network and experience that top employers are looking for.
With a background in public policy and AI ethics, Gross came to Duke’s Master of Engineering in Artificial Intelligence for Product Innovation to understand how models are trained, where bias emerges and how product decisions shape real-world outcomes.
Brinnae Bent has created an AI tool called "DisagreeBot" to demonstrate to students the usefulness and limitations of widely used AI tools.
A Duke–CrowdStrike research collaboration looked at how Russian state-sponsored hackers operate—and came up with recommendations for how U.S. organizations can stop them before damage is done.
The Graduate Student Programs & Services team provides a uniquely embedded support system that empowers master’s and PhD students from around the globe to thrive academically, professionally and personally.
Jon Reifschneider is preparing students to harness AI's potential responsibly and recognize the human contributions that can't be replaced.
A current student in Duke University’s Master of Engineering in Artificial Intelligence for Product Innovation (AIPI) program, Santosh Ganesan is leveraging over 15 years of technical experience to bridge the gap between traditional engineering and cutting-edge AI technologies.
A Duke Engineering and Duke School of Medicine collaboration led to the founding of Inquisite, a company built on the conviction that technology, especially AI, has the potential to help accelerate scientific progress for a better world.
Currently enrolled in Duke’s Master of Engineering in Artificial Intelligence for Product Innovation (AIPI) program and pursuing a second degree in Robotics & Automation, Jared is guided by a clear goal: to design AI-powered systems that don’t just crunch data but interact with the world in meaningful ways.
On Sunday, May 11, 2025, Duke Engineering celebrated nearly 1,100 graduates from its various programs.