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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsThe University of Southern California has received one of the largest private gifts in its history, a transformative $200 million donation from USC Trustee Mark Stevens and his wife Mary. Announced on May 5, 2026, this landmark contribution is set to propel AI research and education across the entire campus, renaming the USC School of Advanced Computing as the USC Mark and Mary Stevens School of Computing and Artificial Intelligence. Housed within the prestigious USC Viterbi School of Engineering, the newly named Stevens School will serve as the epicenter for interdisciplinary AI innovation, drawing top global talent and fostering breakthroughs that blend artificial intelligence with fields like health sciences, national security, business, and the arts.
This gift arrives at a pivotal moment when universities worldwide are racing to keep pace with rapid AI advancements largely driven by private tech giants. By investing heavily in human-centered AI, USC aims to not only compete but lead in ethical, impactful applications that enhance human creativity and address societal challenges. The Stevens' commitment underscores a growing trend in higher education where philanthropic support is fueling the infrastructure needed to train the next generation of AI leaders and researchers.
Who Are Mark and Mary Stevens?
Mark Stevens, a USC alumnus with a Bachelor of Science in electrical engineering and Bachelor of Arts in economics (1981) and a Master of Science in computer engineering (1984), has built an illustrious career in venture capital. As a partner at Sequoia Capital from 1989 to 2012, he played key roles in early investments in transformative companies including Google, Yahoo, YouTube, and notably NVIDIA, where he remains a board member. Today, Stevens manages S-Cubed Capital, his family office, with a net worth exceeding $12 billion, and co-owns the Golden State Warriors NBA team. He and Mary signed the Giving Pledge in 2013, vowing to donate the majority of their wealth to philanthropy.
The couple's longstanding ties to USC are evident in prior gifts: $22 million in 2004 for the USC Stevens Center for Innovation, $50 million in 2015 for the USC Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute (INI), $10 million for the USC Mark and Mary Stevens Center for Orthobiologics, and $10 million recently for athletics facilities. "We know the next great universities will be those that invest in computing," Stevens remarked. "This is a key moment. I am confident that USC has the leadership and direction to run quickly and stake our position as the trailblazer."
The Birth of the Stevens School of Computing and Artificial Intelligence
Launched in 2024 with initial funding from the Lord Foundation of California, the USC School of Advanced Computing was already pioneering human-centered computation from its base in the state-of-the-art Dr. Allen and Charlotte Ginsburg Human-Centered Computation Hall. The $200 million infusion elevates it to new heights, renaming it the USC Mark and Mary Stevens School of Computing and Artificial Intelligence and enabling a university-wide expansion.
Under inaugural director Gaurav Sukhatme, the school boasts USC's top-ranked computer science programs, backed by nearly 60 years of computing legacy—from early mainframes in the 1960s to internet protocols in the 1970s and AI development since the late 1990s. USC ranks as the nation's top producer of computer and information sciences graduates and the second-most common alma mater among Silicon Valley professionals. With over 30 AI- and computing-related majors, minors, and graduate programs enrolling thousands, the Stevens School now has the resources to recruit world-class faculty and scale interdisciplinary projects.
Interdisciplinary AI: Powering Research Across USC Schools
The donation's hallmark is its campus-wide scope, integrating AI into diverse disciplines rather than siloing it in engineering. USC President Beong-Soo Kim highlighted this approach: "Mark and Mary Stevens’ generosity will allow USC to leverage our existing interdisciplinary strengths and capitalize on these new opportunities at a critical inflection point for our society."
Viterbi Dean Yannis C. Yortsos added, "Their generosity at this pivotal time... will lead to breakthroughs, innovation and thought leadership here on the USC campus and around the world." Key initiatives include:
- New Bachelor of Science in Artificial Intelligence (launched fall 2025).
- Artificial Intelligence for Business degree, preparing students for AI-driven commerce.
- Expansion of creative AI applications in USC's No. 1-ranked game design program and School of Cinematic Arts.
This model positions USC to educate leaders who can harness AI responsibly across sectors. Learn more from USC's official announcement.
Revolutionizing Health Sciences with AI
AI's potential in healthcare is immense, and USC is at the forefront. The Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute (INI), already funded by the couple's prior $50 million gift, uses AI to analyze brain scans and genetic data for early detection of Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, schizophrenia, and traumatic brain injuries. The donation will accelerate drug development, regenerative medicine, and predictive models for patient outcomes.
Projects also target suicide prevention among students and military personnel through AI-driven risk assessment. By combining USC's medical expertise with advanced computing, these efforts promise faster diagnostics and personalized treatments, exemplifying how AI funding transforms university research into real-world solutions.
Photo by Kanchanara on Unsplash
AI for National Security and Defense Applications
USC's Institute for Creative Technologies (ICT), a U.S. Army University Affiliated Research Center, leverages AI for immersive training simulations that enhance soldier preparedness without real-world risks. The Stevens gift scales these capabilities, funding safer, more effective virtual environments for tactical decision-making and psychological resilience training.
In cybersecurity and national security, AI models will detect threats proactively, safeguarding critical infrastructure. This aligns with higher education's growing role in defense innovation, bridging academia and government needs.
AI in Business Education: Preparing Tomorrow's Leaders
The new Artificial Intelligence for Business program equips Marshall School of Business students with skills to deploy AI ethically in corporate strategy, operations, and decision-making. As businesses integrate AI—projected to add $15.7 trillion to the global economy by 2030—USC graduates will be primed for high-demand roles in AI strategy, data ethics, and tech consulting.
This initiative addresses the talent gap, where 85% of executives report AI skills shortages, per recent surveys.
Fostering Creativity: AI in Arts and Entertainment
USC's cinematic prowess meets AI in virtual production technologies revolutionizing film, TV, and gaming. The No. 1-ranked Interactive Media & Games Division will pioneer AI tools for dynamic storytelling, procedural generation, and immersive worlds, as seen in alumni contributions to *The Matrix* and *Avatar*.
By augmenting—not replacing—human creativity, these programs ensure artists thrive in an AI-augmented era.
Navigating Ethical AI: Institutes for Trust and Society
Recognizing AI's dual-edged nature, the donation bolsters the USC Institute on Ethics and Trust in Computing, uniting philosophers, scientists, policymakers, and doctors to develop safeguards. The USC Center for AI in Society focuses on equitable applications for underserved communities.
USC's AI committee guides classroom policies, academic integrity, and curricula on societal impacts, ensuring responsible innovation. LA Times covers the ethical surge in AI university gifts.
USC's Enduring AI Legacy and Competitive Edge
With federal research funding placing its CS programs in the top five, USC alumni power Silicon Valley. The Stevens School builds on this, recruiting elite faculty amid fierce competition from industry. As private firms dominate AI R&D, such funding prevents brain drain and sustains academic leadership.
Photo by Alexander Simonsen on Unsplash
Ripple Effects Across Higher Education
This gift joins a wave of mega-donations: Dell Foundation's $750 million to UT Austin for AI-health integration, $100 million to UW-Madison for a new AI college, Schwarzman's $350 million to MIT. These investments signal higher ed's pivot to AI, boosting research output, enrollment in CS/AI programs (up 20% nationally), and interdisciplinary hiring. Forbes notes three $100M+ AI gifts in a month.
Challenges persist: ethical dilemmas, faculty upskilling, and equitable access. Yet, opportunities abound, with AI creating 97 million new jobs by 2025 per World Economic Forum.
Career Opportunities and the Future of AI Talent at USC
The donation heralds a hiring boom: new faculty positions in AI ethics, health AI, creative computing, and more. For aspiring academics, USC offers postdoctoral fellowships, tenure-track roles, and research assistantships amid surging demand—AI specialist salaries average $150,000+, with 30% growth projected.
Students benefit from expanded programs, internships with partners like NVIDIA, and career pipelines to Big Tech and startups. As AI reshapes jobs, USC's initiative ensures graduates are versatile, ethical innovators ready for the AI economy.









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