Enrichment Highlight: Ali Albazroun at Carnegie Mellon’s Robotics Institute
Ali Albazroun, a KGSP rising junior majoring in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, was recently chosen to participate in the Robotics Institute Summer Scholar Program (RISS) at the prestigious Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) in Pittsburgh, PA.
With the encouragement of his KGSP Advisor Emily Hagemeister (whose student Nadia Almutlak, a rising senior at Columbia University, participated in the RISS program last year), Ali utilized resources provided by the KGSP Enrichment Team to learn more about applying for the CMU RISS program, and was later thrilled to be selected to work alongside CMU Professor William “Red” Whittaker. Ali’s RISS project examines image segmentation through the use of super pixels which will help in trying to locate rocks and their boundaries in images to be used for navigation and mapping in lunar robotics missions. The project is part of a larger research initiative at CMU’s Robotics Institute, funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), which aims to develop robot technology that can explore sinkholes on the moon.
In addition to his research, Ali is acquiring valuable pre-professional and academic skills from the program’s workshop series, including developing research presentation skills, conducting literature reviews, and navigating the library system. “It’s exciting to be part of world-class research within human-robot interactions, aerial robotics, biologically inspired robots and more, and to benefit from RISS’ professors and state-of-the-art facilities,” says Ali. He also is learning technical navigation and mapping programming skills like SLAM (Simultaneous Localization and Mapping) and SfM (Structure from Motion) algorithms. As Ali intends to continue his work in robotics as a Mechanical Engineering graduate student at KAUST, his experience both complements prior academic preparation, and significantly develops knowledge of the field at a level few undergraduate students possess.
The talent of KGSP students is evident to hosting partner institutions. "The issues the world is facing today are global, complex, and interconnected,” said Rachel Burcin, the RISS co-Director and Global Programs Manager. “The KGSP scholars bring unique perspectives and make significant contributions to the learning community and research discussions." Dr. John M. Dolan, Director of the RISS and Principal Systems Scientist, further agreed: “I'm extremely pleased to have KAUST and IIE as partners. They extend the international reach and impact of the RISS program."
By supporting such rich research opportunities, the KGSP provides its students with many intensive and meaningful engagement opportunities throughout the school year.
KGSP students interested to learn more about the RISS program should contact their advisor. Others interested may contact Rachel Burcin (rachel@cmu.edu).

STUDENT PROFILE
KGSP students represent the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s future scientists, engineers, entrepreneurs, and thought-leaders. As both individuals and as a community, they reflect the KAUST mission of driving scientific discovery through excellence in education and cutting-edge research, and share a commitment to fostering innovation, economic development, and social prosperity throughout the Kingdom and the world.

ADMISSIONS REQUIREMENTS
Selection to the KGSP is extremely competitive, and currently by invitation only. Successful applicants are Saudi Arabian students in their final year of high school who demonstrate impressive academic credentials within STEM fields, meaningful extra-curricular achievements, and who share the KAUST ethos of continuous discovery. Learn more here.

KGSP ADMINISTRATION
The KGSP is administered by KAUST Academy under the leadership of Dr. Sultan Al-Barakati. KAUST Academy is mandated by KAUST to support the acceleration of Saudi Arabia's knowledge-based economy by providing world class training programs in emerging technologies aligned with Vision 2030. KAUST Academy crafts these unique learning interventions by exporting the intellectual DNA acquired by KAUST for the benefit of the entire Kingdom.

—King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz al Saud
1924 – 2015
