CS at Carolina
UNC Computer Science faculty and students describe the department in their own words.
Career Services
Our Career Services team helps students transform coursework and technical skills into your desired internship and post-graduate job. From personalized career coaching and mock interviews to industry networking events and corporate partner workshops, we connect you with people and opportunities.
Learn MoreCS Experience Labs (CSXL)
Computer Science Experience Labs (CSXL) serve as a collaborative co-working and computing hub, driving hands-on learning opportunities for CS majors designed to accelerate your growth based on your interests, including software engineering, user experience design, production engineering, and product management.
Learn MoreRecent News

MVP research group releases SVI-Bench, a benchmark and catalyst for strategic video intelligence
June 1, 2026Assistant Professor Gedas Bertasius and the Multimodal Video Perception research group are releasing a first-of-its-kind, large-scale benchmark that evaluates the full cognitive stack of video intelligence – from perception through causal reasoning and simulation to strategic planning – to advance the state of the art in real-world, multi-agent video reasoning.

Bertasius, Sengupta earn NSF CAREER Awards for computer vision research
May 26, 2026Assistant Professors Gedas Bertasius and Roni Sengupta of the Department of Computer Science received prestigious NSF Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Awards, which will provide more than $1.1 million to support their computer vision research.

UNC Computer Science honors Class of 2026
May 15, 2026UNC Computer Science held its annual commencement on May 8, honoring 486 graduates across all degree programs over the past year. The department awarded 268 bachelor of science degrees, 112 bachelor of arts degrees, 59 master’s degrees, 20 doctorates, and 27 undergraduate minors.

Building a platform for the “infinite brain”
May 14, 2026Buoyed by a $1.4 million grant, Raghavendra Pothukuchi is working to develop an implantable brain-computer interface built around a custom microchip that processes the brain’s electrical activity. His work will enable better study and monitoring of the brain and assistance or even enhancement of cognitive and sensory-motor functions. To support his work, he has led a growth in chip design infrastructure at UNC-Chapel Hill.







