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Sound Investment: Dolby Extends Partnership with College to Advance AI, Immersive Tech
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Building on more than a year of successful collaboration, Dolby Labs has extended its investment in Georgia Tech’s College of Computing for a second year, donating $600,000 to support cutting-edge research.
Dolby and the College each have laboratories in the Coda building, which promotes collaboration at various levels. The audiovisual technology company supported seven research projects last year, spanning computing systems and AI modeling. The partnership also includes events such as this month’s co-hosted student seminar.
“This partnership has reinforced the importance of taking an interdisciplinary approach to our research,” said Vivek Sarkar, Dean of Computing, who worked in industry for two decades before returning to academia.
“I’d like to see us go even deeper in finding ways to combine faculty from different schools and different research areas to work with one partner.”
[VIDEO: GT Computing Dean Discusses Dolby Deal Details with Senior VP]
Yalong Yang, an assistant professor at Georgia Tech’s School of Interactive Computing, is one of the researchers who received Dolby support last year. He and his lab have been working on creating interactive, immersive versions of stories from the New York Times.
“We’re particularly interested in the engagement side,” Yang said. “That’s what Dolby’s business is about.” Yang and his collaborators have been showing the immersive stories to test subjects while collecting data on heart rate and eye movement.
These collaborations have resulted in several published papers. The code developed is released as open source, enabling anyone to use it. Meanwhile, Dolby scientists can tailor the code for their own needs.
“We deliberately look for ambitious, farther-looking projects," said Shriram Revankar, senior vice president of Dolby’s Advanced Technology Group.
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"These are the risks that academia can take and do well in, because they have constant access to new students and other faculty."
At its core, the partnership is about developing relationships among faculty, students, and Dolby, according to Humphrey Shi.
"The students get experience in solving real-world problems for an international corporation, and Dolby’s researchers expand their knowledge through connecting with Tech faculty," said Shi, an associate professor in interactive computing whose research has also been supported by Dolby.
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- Workflow Status:Published
- Created By:Ben Snedeker
- Created:10/23/2025
- Modified By:Ben Snedeker
- Modified:10/23/2025
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