Artificial Intelligence News
Best Paper Award at STOC 2025
We are delighted to announce that a result coauthored by and (from our Theory and Foundations Research Division), along with (University of Waterloo), (Northeastern University), (Tel Aviv University) and (ETH Zurich), has received a best paper award at the upcoming (STOC), 2025. STOC is a flagship international conference in theoretical computer science.
The paper, titled "," tackles a fundamental, textbook edge-coloring problem: Given a graph G with n vertices and m edges, the goal is to assign a color to each edge such that no two edges sharing a common endpoint receive the same color. A classical result by Vizing, dating back to 1960s, proves that any simple graph can always be edge-colored with at most 螖 + 1 colors, where 螖 is the maximum degree of a vertex. Vizing's original proof is inherently algorithmic and immediately gives an O(mn) time algorithm for computing such a coloring.
This problem has seen a long and influential line of research aimed at designing faster algorithms for this basic task. For over four decades, the best-known runtime was 脮(m鈭歯), a significant barrier that was only broken in 2024 through concurrent, independent works. The recent paper culminates this effort by providing a randomized algorithm that computes a 螖 + 1 edge coloring in O(m log 螖) time, a running time that is near-linear in the input size.
Latest academic promotions
We are very happy to announce four recent promotions in the department effective from 1 August 2025:
- Dr Jonathan FossLink opens in a new window has been promoted to Assistant Professor
- Dr Ayse Saliha SunarLink opens in a new window has been promoted to Assistant Professor
- Dr Adam ShephardLink opens in a new window has been promoted to Assistant Professor
- Dr Greg WatsonLink opens in a new window has been promoted to Associate Professor
Many congratulations to our colleagues for all their achievements!