Bringing Miniaturization Science to the Classroom

David Myers' hands-on microfluidics course lets students build sticker-based devices, enhancing understanding of miniaturization science through active learning.

Machine Learning Encoder Improves Weather Forecasting and Tsunami Prediction

Ph.D. student Phillip Si and Assistant Professor Peng Chen developed Latent-EnSF, a technique that improves how ML models assimilate data to make predictions.

Securing Tomorrow’s Autonomous Robots Today

The Trustworthy Robotics Lab enables robots and autonomous systems to operate safely with humans while remaining resilient to real-world challenges.

New Lab Expanding Healthcare Access Through Novel Sensing Prototypes

School of Interactive Computing's Alexander Adams created the Uncommon Sense Lab to design, fabricate, and implement new ubiquitous and wearable sensing systems.

Generative AI is Most Useful for the Things We Care About the Least

The technology can certainly save time, but it does so precisely to the extent that the user is willing to surrender control over the final product.

Computer Graphics Team Makes Breakthrough in Simulating Ink Diffusion

Interactive Computing researchers earned best-paper recognition for their breakthrough work to model interactions between viscosity and vorticity.

The Secret ‘Sex Lives’ of Bacteria: New Research Challenges Old Ideas About How Species Form

The study reveals that bacteria form distinct species and maintain cohesion through frequent DNA exchange via homologous recombination.

Georgia Tech Faculty Members Earn Presidential Awards

Juan-Pablo Correa-Baena and Josiah Hester are among this year’s winners of the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers.

New Biosensors Could Revolutionize Cancer Detection

BME researchers combine precision and simplicity in cell-free biosensors, transforming diagnostic tools.

From Watts to Warheads: Secretary of Energy Oversees Big Science Research and the US Nuclear Arsenal

The U.S. Department of Energy was created in 1977 by merging two agencies with different missions: the Atomic Energy Commission, which developed, tested and maintained the nation’s nuclear weapons, and the Energy Research and Development Administration.