Only ten teams nationwide will receive exclusive access to the European exascale supercomputer. With the HoMe project, AI research in Bonn is sending a strong signal in the fields of vision, robotics, and generative AI.
Bonn, November 21, 2025. The European exascale supercomputer JUPITER at Forschungszentrum Jülich is one of the most powerful systems in the world. In the nationwide Gauss AI Compute Competition, the first ten projects have now been selected to receive exclusive access to JUPITER – including the working group led by Prof. Dr. Jürgen Gall, Principal Investigator at the Lamarr Institute for Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence and Professor of Computer Science at the University of Bonn. This success strengthens the role of AI research in NRW and underscores the Lamarr Institute's profile in vision, robotics, and generative models.
In the HoMe project – short for the combination of Human Motion and Me, i.e., one's own perspective – the Bonn-based Computer Vision Group is developing a generative AI model that creates realistic videos from a first-person perspective, controlled by a person's three-dimensional body pose. “JUPITER provides us with an infrastructure that takes our research to a whole new level. It enables us to develop models that depict the interplay of perception, movement, and interaction in a much more realistic way, thus providing new impetus for vision and robotics systems,” says Prof. Gall. Controllable video generation opens up applications in AR/VR, teleoperation, computer game development, and robotics. Around 15 million GPU hours are available for training on JUPITER, whose more than 70 exaflops per second – that's 70 trillion (10 to the power of 18) floating point operations per second – for AI workloads are intended to enable fundamental advances in the development of generative models and strengthen Europe's digital sovereignty.
Press Contact:
Caroline Winter
Lamarr Institute for Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence
c/o Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
Friedrich-Hirzebruch-Allee 6, 53115 Bonn
Phone: +49 228 73 69342
Mail: caroline.winter@uni-bonn.de
Web: https://lamarr-institute.org ML Blog: https://lamarr-institute.org/blog
https://lamarr-institute.org/ The Lamarr Institute is shaping a new generation of powerful, sustainable, and trustworthy AI for society and industry. As one of Germany’s leading AI centers, it stands for values-driven research excellence and strong knowledge transfer. Supported by TU Dortmund, the University of Bonn, Fraunhofer IAIS and Fraunhofer IML, it is permanently funded by the BMFTR and the state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
Prof. Dr. Jürgen Gall, Principal Investigator at the Lamarr Institute and Professor of Computer Scie ...
Quelle: Max Waidhas
Copyright: Max Waidhas
Merkmale dieser Pressemitteilung:
Journalisten, Wissenschaftler, jedermann
Informationstechnik
überregional
Forschungsprojekte, Wettbewerbe / Auszeichnungen
Englisch

Prof. Dr. Jürgen Gall, Principal Investigator at the Lamarr Institute and Professor of Computer Scie ...
Quelle: Max Waidhas
Copyright: Max Waidhas
Sie können Suchbegriffe mit und, oder und / oder nicht verknüpfen, z. B. Philo nicht logie.
Verknüpfungen können Sie mit Klammern voneinander trennen, z. B. (Philo nicht logie) oder (Psycho und logie).
Zusammenhängende Worte werden als Wortgruppe gesucht, wenn Sie sie in Anführungsstriche setzen, z. B. „Bundesrepublik Deutschland“.
Die Erweiterte Suche können Sie auch nutzen, ohne Suchbegriffe einzugeben. Sie orientiert sich dann an den Kriterien, die Sie ausgewählt haben (z. B. nach dem Land oder dem Sachgebiet).
Haben Sie in einer Kategorie kein Kriterium ausgewählt, wird die gesamte Kategorie durchsucht (z.B. alle Sachgebiete oder alle Länder).