Navigation Technology Used in Self-Driving Cars Aids Brain Surgery Visualization
Accessing the brain for neurosurgery involves drilling and cutting that can cause deep-brain anatomy to shift or become distorted. This can create discrepancies between pre-operative imaging and the...
View ArticleJohns Hopkins and Amazon Announce Four Fellow and Eight Faculty Research Awards
Amazon and Johns Hopkins University (JHU) today announced the second-year recipients of PhD fellowships and faculty research awards as part of the JHU + Amazon Initiative for Interactive AI (AI2AI)....
View ArticlePutting Prosthetics Research Back in Touch
But Jeremy D. Brown, John C. Malone Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering, and other researchers in the field feel that there is a better path forward. In a new focus feature in Science...
View ArticleCirclage is Surgeons’ New AI Mentor
A team of researchers from Johns Hopkins Malone Center for Engineering and Healthcare and University of Maryland, Baltimore has been awarded a $164,145 grant by the Maryland Innovation Initiative to...
View ArticleWSE’s 14th Annual Speed Networking Night
The Whiting School of Engineering invites you to attend the 14th annual Speed Networking Night. During this event, students will meet with different alumni as they rotate through a series of...
View Article“Ground Truth” Colonoscopy Dataset to Boost Cancer Detection Through AI
Computer vision systems show promise for improving the accuracy of colonoscopy screenings, a procedure that uses a camera to see the inside of the large intestine to detect cancer and other diseases....
View ArticleIn Others’ Words: Using Large Language Models to Accurately Analyze Doctors’...
The amount of digital data available is greater than ever before, including in health care, where doctors’ notes are routinely entered into electronic health record systems. Manually reviewing,...
View ArticleQ&A: Unreliable Mass Transit and American Public Health
In a country of suburban sprawl and endless highways, most Americans need a car in order to complete such basic tasks as going to work, getting groceries, and seeing the doctor. Those without cars are...
View ArticlePower Struggle: Managing Electricity Scarcity Efficiently Key to Avoiding...
Research from the Ralph O’Connor Sustainable Energy Institute (ROSEI) reveals how various pricing strategies in U.S. electricity markets affect the cost of electricity. The study, “Reserve and energy...
View ArticleWhat to Know About a Possible TikTok Ban
Anton (Tony) Dahbura is co-director of the Johns Hopkins Institute for Assured Autonomy, the executive director of the Johns Hopkins University Information Security Institute, and an associate research...
View ArticleGame On: Students Foster Bobcats’ Prey Instinct with “Whac-a-Node”
Animal specialists at the Maryland Zoo know how important it is for animals living in captivity to be able to socialize, rest, and feed as they would in the wild. But helping bobcats Kilgore and Josie...
View ArticleBurp-Busting Bovine Brew
Children are taught from a young age that burping is impolite but—at least judging by cows—Mother Nature seems to have missed that memo. Methane-filled bovine burps (and flatulence) are so prevalent...
View ArticleListen Up, Oysters. Your New Home is Calling
Chesapeake Bay oysters are more than a favorite seafood delicacy: These vital filter feeders help maintain water quality and their reefs also serve as critical habitats for crabs, fish, and other...
View ArticleParkinetics: Improved Motion Data Collection From Parkinson’s patients in...
A student team in the Department of Biomedical Engineering has developed a signal processing algorithm that they hope will someday help clinicians understand how well medication is working for patients...
View ArticleCivil and Systems Engineering Students Develop Theoretical Redesign of...
For their senior design project, teams of Civil and Systems engineering students are reimagining the Baltimore Museum of Art’s (BMA) historic Antioch Court, originally constructed in 1937 to house...
View ArticleHopStart Challenge Showcases Johns Hopkins Student Start-Ups
Student teams from across the university competed for $45,000 in prizes at the 24th annual HopStart: Hopkins New Venture Challenge held Friday, April 26, at the Inn at the Colonnade, north of the Johns...
View ArticleJulie Lundquist, Leader in Sustainable Energy Research, to Join Johns Hopkins...
Update: Read the story and then check out a Q&A with Julie Lundquist at ROSEI’s site. When she was an undergraduate student studying English literature, Julie Lundquist added a physics major...
View ArticleHopkins AITC Announces Awardees of Third Funding Round
The Johns Hopkins Artificial Intelligence and Technology Collaboratory for Aging Research, or JH AITC, has announced the recipients of its third round of grant funding. Totaling just over $1.5 million,...
View ArticleInto the Woods: AI Goes Mushroom Foraging to Learn How Humans Make Choices
Do you prefer shiitakes? Cremini? Portabellos? Or are plain old white button mushrooms your favorite? In a quirky twist in AI research, a multi-institutional team of computer scientists asked people to...
View ArticleSummer Interns Spend Summer “InBaltimore”
The InBaltimore Internship Program, which is part of Johns Hopkins’ Life Design Lab, is designed to increase undergrads’ involvement in Baltimore City and help strengthen the local community. For 10...
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