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WVU students experiment with artificial intelligence to detect fake news

Media Innovation Center

Research Associate Don McLaughlin lectures to computer science students during a class hosted at the WVU Media Innovation Center.

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Students and faculty at West Virginia University aren’t waiting for internet giants like Google and Facebook to provide solutions to fake news.

The WVU Reed College of Media, in collaboration with computer science students and faculty at the Benjamin M. Statler College of Engineering and Mineral Resources, is hosting an artificial intelligence course at its Media Innovation Center that includes two projects focused on using AI to detect and combat fake news articles.

Students in the senior-level computer science elective course are working in teams to develop and implement their own AI programs under the instruction of Don McLaughlin, research associate and retired faculty member of the Lane Department of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering.

Stephen Woerner, a computer science senior, is on one of the teams charged with creating a system that detects fake news articles. His team’s approach utilizes a machine learning system to analyze text and generate a score that represents each article’s likeliness that it is fake news. Woerner added that this score is accompanied by a breakdown that explains the rating and provides transparency.

“Artificial intelligence can have all the same information as people, but it can address the volume of news and decipher validity without getting tired,” Woerner said. “People tend to get political or emotional, but AI doesn’t. It just addresses the problem it’s trained to combat.”

This collaboration with the computer science course serves as an example of the Media Innovation Center’s mission to support initiatives, projects, research and curriculum innovations that intersect its work in technology, media and information networks.

“Fake news isn’t just a media problem,” said Dana Coester, the Media Innovation Center’s Creative Director. “It’s also a social and political problem with roots in technology. Solving that problem requires collaborating across disciplines.”

McLaughlin says working at the Center has helped his students this semester, as it suggests a more creative atmosphere than classrooms he’s used in the past.

“I’ve taught this course before, but the students seem to be more enthused this time. We appreciate the space and the breakout areas available for team collaboration here at the center,” McLaughlin said. “Those amenities are valuable in a university environment.”

Each team will demonstrate their completed AI project during the last week of classes at the Media Innovation Center located in the Evansdale Crossing building.

The course is using free access to the IBM Watson cognitive computing platform, recently provided to the University through an Academic Initiative partnership with IBM, which is putting this technology in the hands of WVU researchers and students so they can create their own cognitive applications. It also helps prepare WVU students to enter the workforce with cognitive computing skills that will be useful for future careers in artificial intelligence.

-WVU-

cc/03/27/17

CONTACT: Christa Currey, Communications Director, Reed College of Media, West Virginia University
304.293.7016, christa.currey@mail.wvu.edu

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