Sherif SaadComputer science professor Sherif Saad has helped to design a computer algorithm that identify fake news stories.

Researcher exposing fake news with computer coding

Computer scientist Sherif Saad says fake news is a major international problem that is continuing to grow, but help is one the way.

A computer detection model he helped to design can identify a fake news story with up to 98 per cent accuracy.

“Fake news is getting more international attention, especially in the wake of the 2016 U.S. presidential election, when we saw fake news stories shared millions of time on social media,” says Dr. Saad, computer science professor.

“We are teaching the computer to distinguish between truth and fiction by giving it known examples, real and fake, until the algorithm develops sensors so it can work on its own in the future,” he says.

Saad and his research team started by feeding articles that have already been deemed real or fake, into a computer program and wrote an algorithm to create “learning models.” Essentially, they are teaching the computer model how to analyze, interpret and predict which stories are true, and which are false.

These machine learning techniques created an algorithm that, in future, can be fed stories on the learned topic, to successfully pick out fake news from legitimate stories. The team started with a combination of news articles from different years with a broader variety of political topics.

“We collected our data set of fake and real articles and limited the scope to revolve around the 2016 US elections and the articles that discuss topics around it. In total, we picked 2,000 articles: 1,000 fake articles and 1,000 real articles,” he says.

“Our model achieved upwards of 98 per cent accuracy when using this type of data. This is a popular but complicated research area and with our model, we’ve had amazing results, better than other attempts.”

Their model can now accurately identify a fake news story about elections, however, Saad says at this point it cannot distinguish stories on other topics. That would require retraining with a new set of articles.

“At this point we can’t design a general news detector, so we must train it for a specific type of stories,” says Saad. “It’s all about context.

“It is expensive and time-consuming to train the program. It can be updated to follow an election from 2008 or 2016, but we need to make a general model that could switch between any topic and didn’t require learning — that is the next goal.”

Saad co-authored the paper Detection of Online Fake News Using N-Gram Analysis and Machine Learning Techniques, published as part of a conference notes series from the International Conference on Intelligent, Secure and Dependable Systems in Distributed and Cloud Environments.


Sara Elliott

Susan McKee, communications co-ordinator for the Faculty of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences, describes academic programs to international students from Windsor high schools.Susan McKee, communications co-ordinator for the Faculty of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences, describes academic programs to international students from Windsor high schools.

Visit opens campus to local international students

Students come from around the world to study in Windsor high schools hoping to hone their skills in English and get a head start on post-secondary education in Canada. A group of 24 of them visited campus Friday to learn about opportunities at the University of Windsor.

“Their needs are different from domestic students even though they are in our local high schools,” says Romi Saraswat, international student recruitment co-ordinator. “That’s why it’s nice for us to connect with them at this point.”

The group encompassed students from both the public and Catholic systems, who heard presentations about academic programs, campus facilities, student support services, and the application process.

Miranda Xiang, an English teacher at Taiyuan Foreign Language School in the Chinese province of Shanxi, accompanied a contingent from that institution. She says the campus visit gave the students an opportunity to explore the variety of programs on offer.

“The tour is really useful for them. They are introduced to the different departments at the University,” she says. “The University of Windsor has provided them with more chances and more choices. They can find their own interests.”

Besides China, the students’ homelands included India, Japan, Spain and Vietnam. Although they come from far away, Saraswat hopes they extend their time in this city.

“When international students are choosing a secondary school, they pick Windsor for a reason,” she says. “We want to give them a reason to stay in Windsor.”

Change coming to login page for UWin Gmail on February 22

On Thursday, February 22, the UWin Gmail system used by all students at the University of Windsor will switch to a different authentication service to recognize and verify a user’s identity.

All users of the UWin Gmail system are required to provide their UWin ID and password on the login page before they can access the system. The credentials provided are then compared to those stored in the central directory.

The biggest impact on users will be a change to the appearance of the login page. The current login page looks like this:

The new login page will look like this:

The change will take place around 7:30 a.m. Any issues related to this change should be reported to the Service Desk by opening a ticket at uwindsor.ca/help or calling 519-253-3000, ext. 4440.

Taskforce to provide support for financial information system

Members of the UWinsite Finance Support Taskforce are available to help all campus community members use the University’s new financial information system.

The Support Taskforce will host following drop-in centres during Reading Week:

  • Tuesday, February 20 | 1:30 – 4 p.m. in room 3105, Lambton Tower
  • Wednesday, February 21 | 10 a.m. – 12 noon in room 2128, Medical Education Building
  • Wednesday, February 21 | 1 – 4 p.m. in CAW Student Centre Commons
  • Thursday, February 22 | 9 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. in room 2101, Chrysler Hall North

UWinsite Finance Support Taskforce members can assist with:

  • Changing your UWin Account Password so it complies with the University’s new password requirements
  • Logging into UWinsite Finance
  • Helpful tips and set-up tricks for the efficient use of UWinsite Finance including how to navigate successfully and how save frequent tasks as favorites
  • Installing the ADF Desktop Integration Installer (a useful tool if you will be uploading spreadsheets to UWinsite Finance)
  • Downloading and installing the Fusion Expenses application on Android and Apple mobile devices (a useful tool for capturing expenses as they are incurred with minimal data entry)
  • Submitting expense reports
  • Delegating expense report submission as well as expense approval authority
  • Submitting purchase orders and receiving goods

The UWinsite Finance Support Taskforce members will continue making scheduled building visits after Reading Week to provide on-site support. They are also available at 519-253-3000, ext. 5385, to provide phone support.


Ericka Greenham

Two students standing in front of hot soup counter.Students ponder lunchtime soup choices in the Marketplace food court.

Reading Week food options limited

Food Services has issued revised hours of operation for Reading Week.

Tuesday through Thursday:

  • Crocodile Grill in Vanier Hall will open 9 a.m. to noon and 5 to 9 p.m.
  • Starbucks in the Toldo Health Education Centre will open 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., as will the Tim Hortons Express in the Centre for Engineering Innovation.
  • The CAW Student Centre’s Marketplace will open 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. with the following stations serving: the Tim Hortons self-serve 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Pizza Pizza 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Hotline 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Burger Bar 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

Only the Croc will be open Friday and Saturday, from 9 a.m. to noon and 5 to 9 p.m. both days.

On Sunday, February 25, the Croc will extend its dinner hours to 11 p.m. and the Marketplace will open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Check the most current information on the Food Services website.