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Halderman co-chairs new commission to protect Michigan votes
  1. Halderman co-chairs new commission to protect Michigan votes

    The effort seeks to protect the integrity of every vote.

  2. Conference comes to my hometown

    With Detroit hosting the National Society of Black Engineers conference, the chapter president reflects on what it means to him.

    The post Conference comes to my hometown appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.

  3. Speedy “slingshot” cell movement observed for the first time

    New findings suggest it might one day be possible to direct healthy cells to advance tissue repair therapies.

    The post Speedy “slingshot” cell movement observed for the first time appeared first on Engineering Research News.

  4. Unravelling the mysteries of bacterial communication

    EECS-ECE PhD student Navid Barani received the IEEE APS Doctoral Research Award for his work modeling how bacteria use electromagnetic waves to communicate, which could lead to medical breakthroughs.

  5. Undergrad Michelle Gehner engineers better ways to explore new worlds

    Gehner’s academic career includes advancing power electronics and crafting new extraterrestrial vehicles for MRover. She received the IEEE Power and Energy Society Scholarship for her promising future in power and energy.

  6. 2018 Nobel Prize Laureate Gérard Mourou talks high-intensity optics

    Gérard Mourou, Professor Emeritus of EECS, returned to campus to discuss winning the Nobel Prize and his work in high-intensity optics.

  7. Two solutions for GPU efficiency can boost AI performance

    Chowdhury’s lab multiplied the number of jobs a GPU cluster can finish in a set amount of time

  8. Extreme light: Nobel laureate discusses the past & future of lasers

    Lasers of tomorrow might neutralize nuclear waste, clean up space junk and advance proton therapy to treat cancer, says Gerard Mourou.

  9. New study finds inaccuracies in arsenic test kits in Bangladesh

    About 25 million Bangladeshis face risks of developing skin lesions and cancers due to unsafe levels of arsenic in drinking water.

    The post New study finds inaccuracies in arsenic test kits in Bangladesh appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.