Aliya Merali had been working in a plasma physics lab at Princeton, but she told us, “I wanted to work on problems where I felt like I would immediately be able to impact the quality of life of people around me.”
That’s why she decided to join the first class at New York University’s (NYU) Center for Urban Science and Progress (CUSP), the still new program that’s projected to take over much of Downtown Brooklyn’s old MTA building over the next few years.
Merali spoke to us last week, not long after graduation. CUSP emphasizes a practical orientation to student work, so students finish the program in internships with city agencies. Merali and two other students opted to take internships with the NYPD, where they worked primarily on data that came from 911 call centers.
Merali and her colleagues have continued to work with the data since graduation. They think they might be able to produce an academic paper out of it, or create a machine-learning prototype the NYPD could try out. (None of their work has been used by the force yet.)
Merali focused on building her technical skills during the academic side of the CUSP program. She studied information visualization, statistics, ArcGIS. Basically everyone in the program also comes out with skills in Python, she added.
Via What NYU CUSP is like, according to recent grad Aliya Merali – Technically Brooklyn
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