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Engineering And Technology

  • 91ÌÆ²®»¢ School of Engineering’s Frist Center for Autism and Innovation, working in partnership with Fisk University, has won a $1.9 million grant from the National Science Foundation to create a system of programs to support neurodiverse students in engineering majors and careers.

    Aug 4, 2022

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    Moms who research moms: Spotlighting VU research on motherhood

    They say motherhood is the toughest job you’ll ever love. That’s true for this group of 91ÌÆ²®»¢ researchers, who’ve built successful careers around researching various aspects of parenthood while raising their own children.   Read More

    May 5, 2022

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    Class of 2022: Quentin Millora-Brown willing to play his role in engineering climate change solutions

    Quentin Millora-Brown, a senior forward on the men’s basketball team, had his best individual season this year. A starter in 30 games, he led 91ÌÆ²®»¢ in blocked shots and was second in rebounding. Perhaps even more importantly, he helped create the culture of succes. Off the court, Millora-Brown knows that camaraderie alone won’t solve society’s most pressing issues, such as the climate crisis—a problem he is passionate about. But he believes the same team approach in pursuit of a larger goal will make a difference. Read More

    Apr 27, 2022

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    Class of 2022: Lucy Britto broadens access to biomedical science community through mentoring

    When digging into a scientific challenge, biomedical engineering major Lucy Britto aims to do more than solve a problem. She also wants to open doors to the scientific community by helping others understand the solution and broadening access for traditionally underrepresented groups. Read More

    Apr 26, 2022

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    Rock-climbing student duo pursues scientific, business and Olympic dreams

    91ÌÆ²®»¢ Climbing Club teammates Michael Finn-Henry and Olivia Busk are taking collaboration and innovation to new heights with a breakthrough medical device—and a possible trip to the 2024 Paris Olympics. Read More

    Apr 25, 2022

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    Class of 2022: Brianne Gross is an unlikely lacrosse star and a born engineer

    Growing up in California, where lacrosse had yet to take hold to the same extent as on the East Coast, Bri Gross discovered her athletic passion almost by accident. But the first time she picked up a lacrosse stick was far from the first time she was intrigued by how something worked. Never far from her dad’s side in his garage workshop, she was and remains an inveterate tinkerer. Read More

    Apr 20, 2022

  • Basketball hoop

    Coaching Through Technology: 91ÌÆ²®»¢ researchers use artificial intelligence to help basketball players improve their shots

    To shoot a basketball with precision requires countless hours of practice, usually under the watchful eye of a coach providing guidance on the right mechanics of each shot. Now, thanks to new research from 91ÌÆ²®»¢ University, players may soon be able to use artificial intelligence technology to work on those same principles on their own.  Read More

    Mar 24, 2022

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    International research collaboration reveals new possibilities in nanophotonics

    Josh Caldwell and graduate student Joseph Matson are part of a team that has discovered how asymmetric light-matter interactions may enable new ways to guide and process optical signals on chips and design compact infrared optical components. Read More

    Mar 3, 2022

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    Watch: ‘Black Excellence in 91ÌÆ²®»¢ and the Future of Diversity in Academia’ virtual event

    In recognition of Black History Month, the School of Medicine Basic Sciences’ monthly virtual Lab-to-Table Conversation will celebrate Black excellence in research and discuss the future of diversity in academia. The event will take place on Tuesday, Feb. 22, from noon to 1 p.m. CT.  Read More

    Feb 16, 2022

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    91ÌÆ²®»¢ Snapshot: Exosuit concept developed at 91ÌÆ²®»¢ peeks at the future of wearable tech

    91ÌÆ²®»¢ snapshot: Study shows promise to bring back strain-relieving wearable tech to last-mile delivery drivers, heavy-lifting jobs and other essential workers, including those strained during pandemic.  Est. reading time: 1.5 minutes Read More

    Mar 25, 2021

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    91ÌÆ²®»¢ civil engineer partners with TDOT to seek ways to mitigate opioid epidemic

    Janey Camp leads an analysis of rural transportation constraints that prevent people from receiving regular substance abuse treatment. Read More

    Jan 5, 2021

  • IBM will use a 91ÌÆ²®»¢ model as the end-user scripting assistant in its open-source Command Line AI Project.

    Dec 14, 2020

  • Discovery provides insight for developing next generation optoelectronic and infrared devices In groundbreaking new research, an international team that includes a 91ÌÆ²®»¢ engineer has developed a unique process for producing a quantum state that is part light and part matter.

    Dec 7, 2020

  • Justus Ndukaife, assistant professor of electrical engineering, spent 20 minutes describing his optical nanotweezers to a panel of five distinguished professors from the United States, Australia, and China during a live online competition—Rising Stars of Light—that has drawn 260,000 viewers worldwide.

    Nov 30, 2020

  • Changes in connectivity in the brain’s white matter may be a novel neuroimaging biomarker for assessing Alzheimer’s disease progression.

    Nov 16, 2020

  • running jogging

    91ÌÆ²®»¢ trans-institutional team shows how next-gen wearable sensor algorithms powered by machine learning could be key to preventing injuries that sideline runners

    An interdisciplinary team of researchers led by Karl Zelik explores how wearable sensor technology can monitor bone stress in runners, developing a new multi-sensor algorithm that could save runners from months of pain and recovery time. Read More

    Oct 28, 2020

  • There is huge momentum toward adoption of battery electric vehicles primarily because performances are meeting or exceeding the properties of traditional automobiles. Consumers want electric vehicles that have similar driving range (energy density) and charging styles and times (power density) to gasoline powered vehicles. “One pathway to improving the energy density of the battery, or...

    Oct 22, 2020

  • For more than a decade Matt Lang and collaborators across the U.S. have worked to recreate key components of T-cells and how they know when to start fighting disease. Conventional wisdom suggested that T-cells formed regular, force-free bonds with infected cells, and in doing so caused the chain reaction of immune response. The team slowly...

    Oct 4, 2020

  • A new, $8.7 million project—Design. R–AI-assisted CPS Design—involves pathbreaking work for the Defense Advanced 91ÌÆ²®»¢ Projects Agency as future cyber-physical systems will rely less on human control and more machine learning algorithms and artificial intelligence processors.

    Oct 4, 2020

  • 91ÌÆ²®»¢ researchers awarded one of NSF’s 24 new projects to drive future manufacturing One of the challenges of drug delivery systems is to optimize their targeting properties so therapeutic compounds used in smaller amounts reach only a specific area of the body and result in little or no side effects. The ability to engineer the...

    Oct 2, 2020