News
Overly acidic soils can mean the difference between feeding a region and famine. Each crop needs the right soil pH to thrive, and acidic conditions, produced primarily by industrial emissions and ...
Register here.Learn what to expect from an undergraduate research experience in neuro and how to identify opportunities that meet your goals. Gain insights from current neuroscience majors engaged in ...
Shao-Yun Hsu kept seeing the same name on research study after research study: Brandon Dixon, an engineer at Georgia Tech.Hsu, a microsurgeon in Taiwan, was trying to figure out how to help her ...
Instead of sitting in a tattoo chair for hours enduring painful punctures, imagine getting tattooed by a skin patch containing microscopic needles. Researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology ...
A robot operating with a popular internet-based artificial intelligence system consistently gravitates to men over women, white people over people of color, and jumps to conclusions about peoples' ...
Making Mashups To make a mashup, users drag and drop up to four songs from either Spotify or the Mixboard music library into vocals, bass, chords, and drum segments for up to 32 bars. The experience ...
Georgia Tech researchers have created a wearable device to accurately measure obstructive sleep apnea — when the body repeatedly stops and restarts breathing for a period — as well as the quality of ...
Micro-brain sensors placed between hair strands overcome traditional brain sensor limitations.Georgia Tech researchers have developed an almost imperceptible microstructure brain sensor to be inserted ...
Just as a chameleon changes colors to mask itself from predators, new AI-powered technology is protecting people’s photos from online privacy threats.The innovative model, developed at Georgia Tech, ...
Georgia Tech was awarded $65.7 million to launch two new JUMP 2.0 research centers. For the photo at bottom: Arijit Raychowdhury (left) and Saibal Mukhopadhyay (center) will lead the two centers.
Georgia Tech Neuroscientists Explore the Intersection of Music and Memory Researchers demonstrate music’s impact on learning and memory, with possible therapeutic applications for mental health.
The world would look very different without multicellular organisms – take away the plants, animals, fungi, and seaweed, and Earth starts to look like a wetter, greener version of Mars. But precisely ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results