Next stop Mars As space exploration speeds up, engineers and other visionaries help us imagine—and prepare for—life beyond our planet. Research , Human-technology interface , Energy, water, and environment , Intelligent systems , Tufts Now , Engineers , Faculty , Alumni , Students , Graduate students
Personalized recommendations and memory solutions Tufts engineers collaborate with colleagues on two new papers presented at HPCA 2022. Research news , Intelligent systems , Faculty , Graduate students
Alumni receive Fulbright-Nehru fellowships Computer science alumni Supriya Sanjay, A19, and Jared Lieberman, A18, will travel to India to conduct research. Human-technology interface , Research news , Intelligent systems , Alumni , Undergraduate students , Women engineers
Inspired to engineer a better future Meet five Tufts students whose scholarship and research help reimagine what’s possible. Human health and bioengineering , Human-technology interface , Energy, water, and environment , Intelligent systems , Tufts Now , Engineers , Students , Graduate students , Undergraduate students , Women engineers , STEM diversity ,
Getting better performance from brains and computers Tufts engineers image hotspots in brains to deal with cognitive overload and in computer chips to make computers more efficient. Research , Human health and bioengineering , Human-technology interface , Research news , Intelligent systems , Tufts Now , Engineers , Faculty
Novel framework for cache management Researchers from the Tufts Computer Architecture Laboratory develop a new framework to produce contention-aware, lightweight repartitioning algorithms. Human-technology interface , Research news , Intelligent systems , Faculty , Graduate students
Computer model seeks to explain the spread of misinformation Tufts computer scientists develop a computer model that remarkably mirrors the way misinformation spreads in real life. Human-technology interface , Research news , Intelligent systems , Faculty , Graduate students , Women engineers
Panetta elected NAI Fellow Professor and Dean of Graduate Education Karen Panetta is recognized by the National Academy of Inventors. Research , Human health and bioengineering , Research news , Intelligent systems , Engineers , Faculty , Women engineers , Campus news
Diagnosing spacecraft faults from a distance PhD candidate Evana Gizzi develops AI software to help NASA repair spacecraft faster and more efficiently. Human-technology interface , Research news , Intelligent systems , Graduate students , Women engineers