Results for
MATLAB EXPO India | 7 May | Bengaluru
Get inspired by the latest trends and real-world customer success stories transforming industries. Learn from trusted experts across 4 tracks.
- AI & Autonomous Systems
- Electrification
- Systems & Software Engineering
- Radar, Wireless & HDL
Register at bit.ly/matlabexpocommunity

Digital Twin Development of PEARL Autonomous Surface System Thermal Management
The top session of the countdown showcases how the PEARL engineering team used a digital twin to solve real‑world thermal challenges in a solar‑powered autonomous marine platform operating in extreme environments. After thermal shutdown events in the field, the team built a model that predicts temperatures at multiple locations with ~1% accuracy, while balancing accuracy with model complexity.
Beyond the technology, this keynote delivers practical lessons for predictive modeling and digital twins that apply well beyond marine systems.
We hope you’ve enjoyed the Top 10 countdown series—and a big thank‑you to Olivier de Weck at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, for delivering such a compelling and insightful keynote.
🎥 If you missed it live, be sure to watch the recording to see why it earned the #1 spot at MATLAB EXPO 2026.

MATLAB EXPO India is Back!
This in-person events brings together engineers, scientists, and researchers to explore the latest trends in engineering and science, and discover new MATLAB and Simulink capabilities to apply to your work.
May 7, 2026 l Bengaluru
Register at bit.ly/matlabexpocommunity

Missed the Cody World Cup Watch Party on March 27—or want to relive the glory?
What you’ll see in the video:
🔥 Top MATLAB users in action
Watch expert solvers think, debug, strategize—and occasionally panic.
Which functions do they reach for? How do they break down the problem?
BEHOLD the power moves… and the 3D arrays.
🏆 Three teams. Six champions. One viciously clever problem.
There may have been NaN traps.
There may have been nested for‑loops.
There may have been… emotions.
🎙️ Professional‑grade commentary by:
@Matt Tearle – Architect of Diabolical Challenges
Their line‑by‑line play‑by‑play turns MATLAB into a true spectator sport.
Finally, tell us what you want to see next—head‑to‑head contests? Team battles? Drop your ideas in the comments. All suggestions welcome!
It’s no surprise this keynote landed at #2. MaryAnn Freeman, Senior Director of Engineering, AI, and Data Science explores how AI, especially generative AI, is transforming the way engineers design, build, and innovate. From accelerating the design loop with faster, data‑driven solutions, to blending human creativity with AI insights, to evolving engineering tools that turn ideas into build‑ready systems. This keynote shows how embedded intelligence helps engineers push past traditional limits and bridge imagination with real‑world impact.
If you’re curious about how AI is reshaping engineering workflows today (and what that means for the future of design), this is a must‑watch.
👉 Watch the keynote recording and see why it was one of the most popular sessions of MATLAB EXPO Online 2025.

This is a reminder that the Cody World Cup Watch Party takes place on March 27 at 10:00 AM ET.
We’ll watch how top MATLAB minds solve a fun‑but‑challenging Cody championship‑round problem, followed by a live open discussion with the players.
📅 To join, download the ics calendar file (link updated and no sign‑in required) or copy the meeting link and add it to your calendar!
Software‑defined vehicles are becoming reality—and this #3 ranked session shows how. In this keynote, Daniel Scurtu (NXP) demonstrates how MathWorks and NXP are working together to accelerate system‑level embedded development.
🔋 Using a vehicle electrification demo that runs across multiple NXP processors, you’ll see:
- Model‑Based Design workflows from concept to deployment
- Intelligent battery management and motor control
- Automatic code generation and hardware deployment
- ☁️ Real‑time cloud analytics and over‑the‑air updates
🛠️ Featuring MATLAB and Simulink products alongside NXP tools like Model-based Design Toolbox (MBDT), S32 Design Studio IDE, and Real-Time Drivers (RTD), this session highlights an end‑to‑end approach that reduces complexity and speeds the transition to software‑defined vehicles.
What’s New in MATLAB and Simulink in 2025
If you missed this session live, this is one of those “everyone’s talking about it” updates you’ll want to catch up on. 👀
This session is packed with the kinds of enhancements that quietly (and not so quietly) change how you work every day.
Here’s why it earned a spot in our Top 4:
- A redesigned MATLAB desktop with customizable sidebars and light/dark themes—built to adapt to how you work
- New side panels for coding and development tasks, plus more control over organizing and customizing figures
- MATLAB Copilot, a generative AI assistant optimized for MATLAB to help you explore ideas, learn techniques, and boost productivity directly in the desktop
- Simulink workflow improvements like a redesigned Simulink scope, more detailed info in quick insert, and automatic signal line straightening
- Enhanced Python integration across MATLAB and Simulink
- New AI deployment options optimized for Qualcomm and Infineon hardware targets
If staying current with MATLAB and Simulink is part of your role—or your edge—this session is a must‑watch. Missing it means missing context for features that will shape how you work in 2026 and beyond.
💬 Discussion topic:
Which single update from this release do you think will most improve your day‑to‑day workflow, and why?
You’re invited to the Cody World Cup Watch Party! Six of the world’s best MATLAB users have advanced to the Cody Contest 2025 Bonus Round to tackle a championship-level Cody problem. Now it’s your chance to watch, learn, and interact with those pros!
📅When & How to Join
Date: March 27, 2026
Time: 10:00 AM Eastern Time
Where: Microsoft Teams (download the ics calendar file or copy the meeting link and add it to your calendar!)
📽 Agenda
Part 1 – Watch Together (25 min)
Watch how those top MATLAB users think, debug, strategize, and occasionally panic😅. Enjoy professional-grade commentary from MathWorks experts as the action unfolds.
Part 2 – Live Discussion (35 min)
Chat directly with those top minds and the problem creator, @Matt Tearle! Reply in the comments with questions you’d like us to ask them.
🧩 Solve the Problem Yourself!
For the best experience, try that Cody problem yourself before the event. Trust us — the discussions are way more fun after you’ve wrestled with it.

Whether you are a beginner or a seasoned expert, this is your chance to see the best in action, pick up MATLAB tips, and have some fun. See you there!
🤖 What does it take to make robotic motion feel… human?
In this session, Tetsushi Sotowa shares how NSK is combining advanced control techniques with deep learning to enable human‑like grasping in electric grippers
You’ll see a real‑world case study featuring:
- Bilateral and force control systems developed in‑house
- MATLAB and Simulink–based control workflows
- Deep learning integration using Deep Learning Toolbox
- A practical path from mechatronics research to intelligent actuation
The result: an AI‑enhanced actuator capable of more natural, responsive grasping—bringing robotics one step closer to human motion.
👉 Interested in AI‑driven robotics and advanced control? Check out the session now from MATLAB EXPO 2025.
Missed a crowd‑favorite session feautring Marko Gecic at Infineon and Lucas Garcia at MathWorks?
This talk shows how to verify and test AI for real‑time, safety‑critical systems using an AI virtual sensor that estimates motor rotor position on an Infineon AURIX TC4x microcontroller. Built with MATLAB and Simulink, the demo covers training, verification, and real‑time control across a wide range of operating conditions.
You’ll see practical techniques to test robustness, measure sensitivity to input perturbations, and detect out‑of‑distribution behavior—critical steps for meeting standards like ISO 26262 and ISO 8800. The session also highlights how Model‑Based Design leverages AURIX TC4x features such as the PPU and CDSP to deploy AI with confidence.

Featuring: Dr. Arthur Clavière, Collins Aerospace
How can we be confident that a machine learning model will behave safely on data it’s never seen—especially in avionics? In this session, Dr. Arthur Clavière introduces a formal methods approach to verifying maching learning generalization. The talk highlights how formal verification can be apploied toneural networks in safety-critical avionics systems.
💬 Discussion question:
Where do you see formal verification having the biggest impact on deploying ML in safety‑critical systems—and what challenges still stand in the way?
Join the conversation below 👇
🚀 Unlock Smarter Control Design with AI
What if AI could help you design better controllers—faster and with confidence?
In this session, Naren Srivaths Raman and Arkadiy Turevskiy (MathWorks) show how control engineers are using MATLAB and Simulink to integrate AI into real-world control design and implementation.
You’ll see how AI is being applied to:
🧠 Advanced plant modeling using nonlinear system identification and reduced order modeling
📡 Virtual sensors and anomaly detection to estimate hard-to-measure signals
🎯 Datadriven control design, including nonlinear MPC with neural statespace models and reinforcement learning
⚡ Productivity gains with generative AI, powered by MATLAB Copilot
At #9 in our MATLAB EXPO 2025 countdown: From Tinkerer to Developer—A Journey in Modern Engineering Software Development
A big thank‑you to Greg Diehl at NAVAIR and Michelle Allard at MathWorks, the team behind this session, for sharing their multi‑year evolution from rapid‑fire experimenting to disciplined, scalable software development.
If you’ve ever wondered what it really takes to move MATLAB code from “it works!” to “it’s ready for production,” this talk captures that transition. The team highlights how improved testing practices, better structure, and close collaboration with MathWorks experts helped them mature their workflows and tackle challenges around maintainability and code quality.
Curious about the pivotal moments that helped them level up their engineering software practices?

Couldn’t catch everything at MATLAB EXPO 2025? You’re not alone. Across keynotes and track talks, there were too many gems for one sitting. For the next 9 weeks, we’ll reveal the "Top 10" sessions attended (workshops excluded)—one per week—so you can binge the best and compare notes with peers.
Starting at #10: Simulation-Driven Development of Autonomous UAVs Using MATLAB
A huge thanks to Dr. Shital S. Chiddarwar from Visvesvaraya National Institute of Technology Nagpur who delivered this presentation online at MATLAB EXPO 2025. Are you curious how this workflow accelerates development and boosts reliability?

A coworker shared with me a hilarious Instagram post today. A brave bro posted a short video showing his MATLAB code… casually throwing 49,000 errors!
Surprisingly, the video went virial and recieved 250,000+ likes and 800+ comments. You really never know what the Instagram algorithm is thinking, but apparently “my code is absolutely cooked” is a universal developer experience 😂
Last note: Can someone please help this Bro fix his code?

Missed a session or want to revisit your favorites? Now’s your chance!
Explore 42 sessions packed with insights, including:
✅4 inspiring keynotes
✅ 22 Customer success stories
✅5 Partner innovations
✅11 MathWorks-led technical talks
Each session comes with video recordings and downloadable slides, so you can learn at your own pace.
The Cody Contest 2025 has officially wrapped up! Over the past 4 weeks, more than 700 players submitted over 20,000 solutions. In addition, participants shared 20+ high-quality Tips & Tricksarticles—resources that will benefit Cody users for years to come.
Now it’s time to announce the winners.
🎉 Week 4 winners:
Weekly Prizes for Contest Problem Group Finishers:
@JKMSMKJ, @Yu Zhang, @Oliver Jaros, @Pauli Huusari, @Karl, @Marcos Silveira, @goc3, @Ildeberto de los Santos Ruiz, @Norberto, @Eric
Weekly Prizes for Contest Problem Group Solvers:
Weekly Prizes for Tips & Tricks Articles:
This week’s prize goes to @WANG Zi-Xiang. See the comments from our judge and problem group author @Matt Tearle:
‘We had a lot of great tips for solving Cody problems in general and the contest problems specifically. But we all know there are those among us who, having solved the problem, still want to tinker and make their code better. There are different definitions of "better", but code size remains the base metric in Cody. Enter Wang Zi-Xiang who compiled a list of many tips for reducing Cody size. This post also generated some great discussion (even prompting our insane autocrat, Lord Ned himself, to chime in). I particularly like the way that, while reducing Cody size often requires some arcane tricks that would normally be considered bad coding practice, the intellectual activity of trying to "game the system" makes you consider different programming approaches, and sometimes leads you to learn corners of MATLAB that you didn't know.’
🏆 Grand Prizes for the Main Round
Team Relentless Coders:
2nd Place: @Roberto
Team Creative Coders:
Team Cool Coders
Congratulations to all! Securing a top position on the leaderboard requires not only advanced MATLAB skills but also determination and consistency throughout the four-week contest. You will receive Amazon gift cards.
🥇 Winning Team
The competition was incredibly tight—we even had to use the tie-breaker rule.
Both Team Cool Coders and Team Relentless Coders achieved 16 contest group finishers. However, the last finisher on Cool Coders completed the problem group at 1:02 PM on Dec 7, while the last finisher on Relentless Coders finished at 9:47 PM the same day.
Such a close finish! Congratulations to Team Cool Coders, who have earned the Winning Team Finishers badge.

🎬 Bonus Round
Invitations have been sent to the 6 players who qualified for the Bonus Round. Stay tuned for updates—including the Big Watch Party afterward!
Congratulations again to all winners! We’ll be reaching out after the contest ends. It has been an exciting, rewarding, and knowledge-packed journey.
See you next year!
I can't believe someone put time into this ;-)

Over the past three weeks, players have been having great fun solving problems, sharing knowledge, and connecting with each other. Did you know over 15,000 solutions have already been submitted?
This is the final week to solve Cody problems and climb the leaderboard in the main round. Remember: solving just one problem in the contest problem group gives you a chance to win MathWorks T-shirts or socks.
🎉 Week 3 Winners:
Weekly Prizes for Contest Problem Group Finishers:
@Umar, @David Hill, @Takumi, @Nicolas, @WANG Zi-Xiang, @Rajvir Singh Gangar, @Roberto, @Boldizsar, @Abi, @Antonio
Weekly Prizes for Contest Problem Group Solvers:
Weekly Prizes for Tips & Tricks Articles:
This week’s prize goes to @Cephas. See the comments from our judge and problem group author @Matt Tearle:
'Some folks have posted deep dives into how to tackle specific problems in the contest set. But others have shared multiple smaller, generally useful tips. This week, I want to congratulate the cumulative contribution of Cool Coder Cephas, who has shared several of my favorite MATLAB techniques, including logical indexing, preallocation, modular arithmetic, and more. Cephas has also given some tips applying these MATLAB techniques to specific contest problems, such as using a convenient MATLAB function to vectorize the Leaderboard problem. Tip for Problem 61059 – Leaderboard for the Nedball World Cup:'
Congratulations to all Week 3 winners! Let’s carry this momentum into the final week!