News
Scientists are developing tiny medical machines that stretch the definition of the term "robot."
Exploiting the techniques of game theory to come up with the superior poker hand.
Genomic research has led to remarkable insights and medical breakthroughs, but it also represents serious privacy risks.
Blockchain's undeletable data can address privacy and security issues in the fine art markets.
MIT's Josh Tenenbaum on how people think and learn, and how to make machines do likewise.
Maturing bug bounty programs spot data abuse, secure the Internet of Things.
Artificial software can outperform human doctors at reading medical imaging.
Adopting a Culture of Transparency
Software is used increasingly to determine the existence of scientific fraud in published studies.
niversities FLIP For Diversity
Cornell University's computer science department is leveraging ideas from other departments in pursuit of more diverse academic candidates.
Regulating Automated Decision Making
A group assembled by Informatics Europe and the policy committee of the ACM Europe Council produced a report entitled "When Computers Decide" that makes 10 recommendations to policy leaders regarding automated decision making.
Broadening the Path for Women in STEM
Organizations work to address 'a notable absence of women in the field.'
Electronics Are Leaving the Plane
Stacking chips and connecting them vertically increases both speed and functionality.
Rethinking Autonomous Vehicles
Consumer fears intensify as self-driving car fatalities dent the driverless dream.
Fujitsu says its "Quantum-Inspired" Digital Annealing is capable of tackling combinatorial optimization problems.
Simpifying Machine-based Touch Sensing
A three-dimensionally-printed nervous system could allow robots to perceive touch the way we do.
The future of insect-sized remote-controlled aerial robots will be electromechanical, rather than cyborg.
Shape the Future of Computing
ACM encourages its members to take a direct hand in shaping the future of the association. There are more ways than ever to get involved.
Get InvolvedCommunications of the ACM (CACM) is now a fully Open Access publication.
By opening CACM to the world, we hope to increase engagement among the broader computer science community and encourage non-members to discover the rich resources ACM has to offer.
Learn More