The doctoral researcher claimed first place in the general specialties category, surpassing Tahia ben Mohamed ben Saoud Attoubia from Sultan Qaboos University and Sundos Nasser Said Al Subhi from Georgia State University in the United States.
Additionally, Khalid Mubarak AlJabri from Sultan Qaboos University won the prize in the Artificial Intelligence specializations category, followed by Alaae Ismail Annoubi from Imam Abdulrahman bin Faisal University (Saudi Arabia) and Machaiil bent abd Arrahmane Allhibi from King Saud University (Saudi Arabia).
The prize was organized by the Federation of the Universities of the Islamic World, which reports to the Islamic World Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (ICESCO).The ceremony was organized in cooperation with ICESCO’s Chair on Machine Learning for Remote Sensing at Sultan Qaboos University, the Society of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) for Geoscience and Remote Sensing, and the Omani National Commission for Education, Culture and Science.
This edition brought together PhD researchers at 35 universities from 25 countries and was marked by a new prize in the fields of artificial intelligence.