By studying the way social forces shape health inequalities, medical sociology helps address how health and illness extend beyond the body and into every aspect of people’s lives.
The College of Computing named Professor Rich Vuduc as director of the Center for Scientific Software Engineering (CSSE). The Âé¶¹Çø Tech hub is dedicated to building reliable, high-performance software for scientists.
Interactive computing students are developing new data tools to reduce bird/building strikes in Atlanta, which is among the country's deadliest cities for migratory birds.
Yunan Luo is the recipient of an NSF Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) award to use artificial intelligence to solve the protein annotation inequality problem.
A Ph.D. graduate’s research shows that the more humanlike an AI agent is, the less likely a user is to follow it.
The study links energy insecurity to significantly higher rates of anxiety and depression in U.S. households.
This is the Institute’s best ranking in the National Science Foundation’s annual survey.
Studying how mice see has helped researchers discover unprecedented details about how individual brain cells communicate and work together to create a mental picture of the visual world.
Instead of searching for a single molecule or structure that proves the presence of biology, researchers attempted to classify how likely mixtures of compounds preserved in rocks and meteorites were to contain traces of life by examining the full chemical
Pre-owned options are becoming increasingly viable, thanks in part to laws and policies that encourage recycling and reuse of devices that might previously have been thrown away.