A healthier society depends on engineering solutions that transform care, improve outcomes, and extend well-being to all. We use cookies to improve your experience on our site. By using our site, you ...
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Building on our legacy in high-performance computing and distributed systems, we bring together world-class teams in ...
Student-led startup pursues award-winning treatment for patients with disruptions to their autonomic body processes.
Haozhe “Harry” Wang’s electrical and computer engineering lab at Duke welcomed an unusual new lab member this fall: artificial intelligence. Using publicly available AI foundation models such as ...
Duke University and the University of Georgia are partnering with leaders from the insurance and climate data industries to launch the Center for Innovation in Risk, Catastrophes, and Decisions ...
Electrical engineers at Duke University have demonstrated the ability to print fully functional and recyclable electronics at sub-micrometer scales. The technique could impact the more than $150 ...
Researchers at Duke University used CRISPR technologies to discover previously unannotated stretches of DNA in the ‘dark genome’ that are responsible for controlling how cells sense and respond to the ...
Biomedical engineers at Duke University have developed a platform that combines automated wet lab techniques with artificial intelligence (AI) to design nanoparticles for drug delivery. The approach ...
Team led by Duke Quantum Center advances toward designing a powerful 256-qubit quantum computer as part of a major NSF initiative for quantum technology. A year of planning and gathering input from ...
In 2020, the National Science Foundation awarded Duke University a $3 million research traineeship grant to develop a program for graduate students to develop expertise in using AI for materials ...
Biomedical engineers at Duke University have successfully conducted experiments to treat damage caused by heart attacks in non-human primates using gene therapy for the first time. More than 800,000 ...
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