Carnegie Mellon University researchers are using sound to help people with hand tremors, cerebral palsy, nervous system damage, and other fine-motor limitations enjoy video games.
Tom Sullivan is a Teaching Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) and holds a courtesy Lecturer appointment in the School of Music as part of the faculty for the ...
The Student Sustainability Liaison Program, initiated by the Sustainability Initiative, empowers students to research current practices, identify opportunities, and champion meaningful change within ...
Lujo Bauer, professor of electrical and computer engineering and of computer science, has been named a 2025 Association for Computer Machinery (AMC) Fellow for contributions to access control, usable ...
The human brain is complex. Understanding deep brain function usually requires the insertion of probes that frequently result in irreversible tissue damage. Current neural probes are made out of ...
Large language models (like GPT-style models) keep getting bigger. As they grow, they need more memory and faster communication between chips to run or to train them. These needs are becoming major ...
Imagine snapping a photo where every detail, near and far, is perfectly sharp—from the flower petal right in front of you to the distant trees on the horizon. For over a century, camera designers have ...
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) has awarded Franz Franchetti, professor of electrical and computer engineering and associate dean for research, and Ken Mai, principal ...
Whether it be a rough tackle on the football field or blast exposure on the battlefield, high-impact accidents can induce a condition that’s very difficult to treat, frequently resulting in ...
The radio spectrum is a fundamental resource for wireless communication. Cellular networks, WiFi, and bluetooth are all examples of wireless systems that depend on the radio spectrum. Researchers from ...