Powering Artificial Intelligence

George Mason University is driving rapid AI adoption and advancements across the Commonwealth

 

As the largest and most diverse university in Virginia, just outside Washington, D.C., George Mason University is leading the future of inclusive artificial intelligence (AI) and developing responsible models for AI research, education, workforce development, and community engagement within a modern university.

As AI reshapes industries, George Mason combines fearless ideas that harness the technology’s boundless potential to address the world’s grand challenges, while creating guardrails based on informed, transdisciplinary research around ethical governance, regulatory oversight, and social impact.

Led by the university’s inaugural vice president and chief artificial intelligence officer (CAIO) Amarda Shehu with an AI Visioning Task Force, George Mason is reimagining operational excellence in every facet of the university.

Amarda Shehu headshot

Amarda Shehu, 

VP and CAIO,
George Mason University

Read more about her appointment

LISTEN to Access to Excellence Podcast — EP 64: Amarda Shehu: Navigating AI’s risks and rewards

AI Model for Higher Ed

George Mason is building a nexus of collaboration and resources on campus, throughout the region with our vast partnerships, and across the state, called AI2Nexus.

As a model for universities, AI2Nexus is based on four key principles: Integrating AI to transform education, research, and operations; Inspiring with AI to advance higher education and learning for the future workforce; Innovating with AI to lead in responsible AI-enabled discovery and advancements across disciplines; and Impacting with AI to drive partnerships and community engagement for societal adoption and change.

AI infrastructures are a national security and human safety issue, Mason professor says

Through his Minerva Project, J.P. Singh, Schar School of Policy and Government, wants to understand “how preferences or interests from society, business, or other government actors shape policy in terms of what countries are doing with their national AI infrastructures.”

Learn more about J.P. Singh's Minerva Project

Integrate AI: Advancing Operations with NebulaONE

George Mason is reimagining operational excellence, equipping every student, faculty member, and staff with access to hundreds of cutting-edge Gen AI models through the revolutionary NebulaONE platform rolling out in early spring.

 


Inspire AI: Designing Curriculum for the Future Workforce

George Mason is equipping students with AI skills as a leader in developing AI-ready talent ready to compete and new ideas for critical sectors like cybersecurity, public health, and government.  In the classroom, the university is developing courses and curriculums to better prepare our students for a rapidly changing world. 

In Spring of 2025, the university launched a cross-disciplinary graduate course, AI: Ethics, Policy, and Society. In Fall 2025, the university is debuting a new undergraduate course open to all students, AI4All: Understanding and Building Artificial Intelligence. A master's in computer science and machine learning, an Ethics and AI minor for undergraduates of all majors, and a Responsible AI Graduate Certificate are more examples of Mason’s mission to innovate AI education. New academies are also in development.  

Research using AI to track Amazon rainforest species produces landmark results 
 

George Mason students receive real-world, hands-on experience with AI. An example is the team of undergraduate researchers that worked under researcher David Luther to analyze acoustic recordings from the tropics to identify animals. Hear more about Luther's tracking research.

 


Fuse at Mason Square fosters collaboration and innovation by creating spaces for students and researchers to work side-by-side with industry leaders. View the space.

Innovate with AI: Building a Responsible Ecosystem

George Mason’s ecosystem of AI teaching, cutting-edge research, and incubators for entrepreneurs foster interdisciplinary collaborations and substantiate a virtuous cycle between foundational and user-inspired AI research within ethical frameworks.

The university hosts workshops, conferences, and public forums to shape the discourse on AI ethics and governance while forging deep and meaningful partnerships with industry, government, and community organizations to co-develop impactful AI technologies for a richly diverse global society.

George Mason partners with tech leaders like Google and Amazon Web Services to offer certifications in data analytics, cybersecurity, and cloud computing, enhancing student expertise. 


 

Impact AI: Driving Community Engagement and Adoption

George Mason is tackling the world’s most urgent challenges with a purpose and vision for societal change. The university’s AI-in-Government Council is a partnership between academia, public-sector tech providers, and government. It is a trusted resource for advancing AI approaches, governance frameworks, and robust guardrails to guide the development and deployment of responsible AI in government. Leading experts and faculty also participate in statewide efforts.

George Mason collaborates with other universities across the country to bring together experts and students to advance research. Gentopia, with North Carolina State University, George Mason University, and Carnegie Mellon University, aims to push the boundaries of natural language processing. Gentopia lets researchers develop and share tool-augmented natural language models and discover new ways of using them for various tasks and domains.

A man wearing a blazer, tie and button-down shirt, wears headphones as he speaks into a microphone in a recording booth.

Virginia governor Glenn Youngkin has appointed Jamil N. Jaffer, the founder and executive director of the National Security Institute (NSI) at George Mason’s Antonin Scalia Law School, to his new AI Task Force, which will work with legislators to regulate rapidly advancing AI technology. Learn about Jaffer's appointment to the AI Task Force.


News and Spotlights

Faculty leading in classroom experiences and research on campus

Missy Cummings headshot. Missy poses next to a robot.

Missy Cummings 

Professor, College of Engineering and Computing  
Co-Director, Mason Autonomy and Robotics Center (MARC) 
First American Bank Chair

One of the U.S. Navy's first female fighter pilots, Cumming is an American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) Fellow and recently served as the senior safety advisor to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

J.P. Singh

Professor of Global Commerce and Policy, Schar School of Policy and Government  Co-Director, Center for Advancing Human-Machine Partnership 

Singh was awarded a three-year, $1.39 million grant from the Department of Defense’s esteemed Minerva Research Initiative to study the economic and cultural determinants for global AI infrastructures—and describe their implications for national and international security.

A white male with light beard and mustache poses outside

Jesse Kirkpatrick 

Research Assistant Professor, College of Humanities and Social Sciences
Acting Director, Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy
Co-Director, Mason Autonomy and Robotics Center (MARC)

Kirkpatrick is an International Security Fellow at New America and serves as a consultant for numerous organizations. His research focuses on the ethics of peace and security, emphasizing the ethical, social, and policy implications of emerging technologies.

Janusz Wojtusiak headshot

Janusz Wojtusiak 

Professor, College of Public Health
Director, Machine Learning and Inference Laboratory 

Wojtusiak’s expertise spans machine learning, health informatics, and the use of artificial intelligence in clinical decision support and knowledge discovery in medical data. He is interested in developing algorithms that derive usable models from complex health data to predict patient and population outcomes.

Dasha Pruss

Dasha Pruss 

Assistant Professor, College of Humanities and Social Sciences and College of Engineering and Computing (joint appointment) 

Pruss is a faculty associate at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University, where she was also a 2023-24 fellow. Her research examines the social impacts of algorithmic decision-making systems in the U.S. criminal legal system.

Theme Monroe-White headshot

Thema Monroe-White 

Associate Professor of Artificial Intelligence and Innovation Policy, Schar School of Policy and Government and College of Engineering and Computing 

As an interdisciplinary scholar, Monroe-White’s work explores the systemic biases that affect the workforce and educational journeys of racially minoritized groups within the STEM fields. She is a fellow of the Institute in Critical Quantitative and Mixed Methodologies and served a three-year term as a special government employee data scientist on the Bureau of Labor Statistics Technical Advisory Committee.


AI at George Mason: In the Media

How Arlington County used AI to improve emergency preparedness (CIO Dive)


Rep. Don Beyer wanted to understand AI, so he enrolled at George Mason (Virginia Public Media)


Analyzing Status of Global AI Infrastructure (Video: The Brand Called You)


George Mason opens $254M hub as Virginia aims to draw in more tech (Washington Post)


Missy Cummings Takes AI to New Heights at George Mason University (Northern Virginia Magazine)


Virginia Activates its Artificial Intelligence Task Force (Government Technology)


George Mason opens $254M hub as Virginia aims to draw in more tech (Washington Post)

Fuse Topping out ceremony demonstration with robotic dogs