R.I.P. 3-1-1
Homeland Security's Science And Technology DirectorateTired of tossing your water, and putting your toiletries in those little airport baggies? Washington feels your pain.
Tired of tossing your water, and putting your toiletries in those little airport baggies? Washington feels your pain.
Rowan U engineering team is exploring brain/computer interfaces, with an eye to many future applications in health and security areas.
Wolters Kluwer Health, a leading provider of medical information, has launched XtraCredit®, an iPhone® and iPod Touch® application that provides physicians with continuing medical education (CME) credit for clinical research done online. XtraCredit was developed by the Lippincott Continuing Medical Education Institute, a Wolters Kluwer Health subsidiary, in partnership with software developer RSi/Focal Search.
Building upon novel technology developed while working on Homeland Security projects at Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) as well as from his biomedical graduate student days, a Virginia Tech assistant professor of biomedical engineering is now creating unique microsystems that are showing considerable promise for the detection of cancer and for the study of the progression of this disease.
Hurricane Katrina. The Southeast Asian tsunami. Now the killer earthquake in Haiti, which has claimed upwards of 50,000 lives. In each case, the response to a natural disaster has been further complicated by the difficulty delivering medical care in a chaotic environment where the communications infrastructure on the ground is seriously damaged or completely destroyed.
Novel research ahs improved the simulation performance of hardware models created in a language called SystemC, often used to shorten manufacturing design cycles to improve the time it takes to bring a product to the marketplace. Preliminary experiments showed the researchers were able to speed up SystemC based simulation by factors of 30 to 100 times that of previous performances.
Technion scientists have made a breakthrough that could revolutionize the way broadband signals are sampled, recorded and processed. Their prototype could be used to improve radar capabilities and performance, increase audio recording device capacity, and reduce patient exposure to radiation during MRIs, x-rays and CT-scans.
Scientists have automated the measurement of a vital part of the knee in images with a computer program that performs much faster and just as reliably as humans who interpret the same images.
A Clarkson University professor is developing software programs that will test cybersecurity systems for flaws before they become operational. The National Science Foundation is funding the $1.2 million project, which also involves four other research centers.
The willingness to jump off an obvious career path, make a sudden change in direction, and, sometimes, take advantage of a stroke of luck landed these 10 technologists their dream jobs.
New work on Sandia National Laboratories’ Red Storm supercomputer — the 17th fastest in the world — is helping to make supercomputers more accessible, in effect removing them from the solitary confinement of their specialized operating systems.
A new, low-cost bushfire detection and monitoring system is being developed by University of Adelaide researchers using mobile communications technology.
Is there a recipe a scientist might follow to spur creativity and cook up new discoveries? Cyber security expert Kevin Fu says experimenting with flour, salt and yeast to bake artisanal bread helps him keep creative juices flowing and creates space in which to mull over thorny research problems.
Building microscopic materials known as superlattices on the surface of gold may lead to a treasure for researchers interested in faster, smaller, and more energy efficient computing devices, say researchers at Missouri University of Science and Technology (Missouri S&T).
Technology invented at the University of Virginia's School of Medicine was named one of the 10 most exciting tools to hit the life sciences in 2009 by The Scientist magazine, a leading voice for the life science industry with more than a million readers.
A fleet of robots is now rolling through the supply chain tunnels underneath Rush University Medical Center transporting linens, supplies, and trash. Rush has acquired 14 automated guided vehicles (AGVs), mobile robots that can move supply carts around campus.
From a lethal distraction for drivers to dehumanizing personal interactions, text messaging has gotten a bum rap lately. But for doctors treating patients with chronic diseases, text messaging can be an invaluable tool, according to Johns Hopkins Children’s Center pediatrician Delphine Robotham.
Is there any redeeming value in the hours that teens spend transfixed by these video games? According to a new study regular gamers are fast and accurate information processors, not only during game play, but in real-life situations as well.
Women play longer in popular online game, are happier players than men and healthier than both sexes in general population – but are less honest about their time online, according to a new study in the Journal of Communication.
The roving, walking robotic soldiers of the “Terminator” films are becoming less sci-fi and more certain future every day. Now, a team of robotics researchers from the Virginia Tech College of Engineering will build a team of fully autonomous cooperative battle-ready robots as part of a 2010 international war games challenge that could spur real-life battle bots.
A NIST team has prototyped a new handheld touch-screen application, a fingerprint identification system suitable for use by the FBI's Hostage Rescue Team.
Verifying the accuracy of network analyzers was once an awkward process involving multiple steps and pieces of equipment. Now, thanks to researchers at NIST, much of that process can be automated. Results are both more complete and available in a matter of minutes, not hours or days.
NIST has issued a draft publication for public comment that describes changes to the Security Content Automation Protocol, a suite of specifications that standardize how software products exchange information about software flaws and security configurations.
NIST and the National Telecommunications and Information Administration have announced plans to create a demonstration broadband communications network for the nation's emergency services agencies using a portion of the radiofrequency spectrum freed up by the recent transition of U.S. broadcast television from analog to digital technologies
A palm-sized modular toy "makes you want to experiment and learn about the capabilities of magnetism," says the undergraduate student who designed it, and won an international contest with it.
For a generation of students raised and nurtured at the computer keyboard, it seems like a no-brainer that computer-assisted learning would have a prominent role in the college science classroom.
Americans bought more than $21 billion worth of video game systems, software and accessories in 2008. This year, Wake Forest University students have created the blog, VGameU.org, to help players and parents evaluate new video games for the holiday season.
Developing "CityTech Island" in Second Life is more than a game to students and faculty at the College. It's an interdisciplinary opportunity to collaborate, whether on the design and development of a virtual (biological) cell or a museum. The College is a good example of 'best practices' in the use of SL as a learning too. See why.
Computer games and TV account for bulk of information consumed in 2008.
A Cornell researcher has created an extremely efficient transistor made from gallium nitride, a material that may soon replace silicon as king of semiconductors for power applications.
The Computer History Museum of Mountain View, Calif., will be the new home for Iowa State University's full-scale, working replica of the Atanasoff-Berry Computer (ABC) for at least 10 years. The replica of the first electronic digital computer was completed and demonstrated in 1997 as a tribute to the late innovators of the ABC, John Vincent Atanasoff, a former Iowa State professor of physics and mathematics, and Clifford Berry, a former physics graduate student.
Looking for larks? Searching for surfbirds? Checking for chickadees? There’s an app for that. BirdsEye, a new application for the iPhone and the iPod touch, is now available.
For those who are deaf or hard of hearing, cell phone use has largely been limited to text messaging. But technology is catching up: Cornell researchers and colleagues have created cell phones that allow deaf people to communicate in sign language – the same way hearing people use phones to talk.
Taking inspiration from genetic screening techniques, researchers from MIT and Harvard have demonstrated a way to build better artificial visual systems with the help of low-cost, high-performance gaming hardware.
Researchers at the Joint Quantum Institute have created “synthetic” magnetic fields for ultracold gas atoms, in effect “tricking” neutral atoms into acting as if they are electrically charged particles subjected to a real magnetic field.
iPhones are being used as musical instruments in a new course at the University of Michigan.
Antennas are used in everything from cell phones to GPS devices, and research from North Carolina State University is revolutionizing the field of antenna design – creating shape-shifting antennas that open the door to a host of new uses in fields ranging from public safety to military deployment.
Scoot over winds and brass, strings and chorale – it is time to make room for the laptop orchestra. Virginia Tech's laptop group is the first Linux-based orchestra in the world with focus on ultra-affordable design.
Advances in computerized modeling and prediction of group behavior, together with improvements in video game graphics, are making possible virtual worlds in which defense analysts can explore and predict results of many different possible military and policy actions, say computer science researchers at the University of Maryland in a commentary published in the November 27 issue of the journal Science.
Particle beams are again zooming around the world’s most powerful particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider, where UMass Amherst physicists run experiments to collect data on fundamental atomic particles. The work searches for new states of matter and may unveil the secrets of dark matter.
Comparing prices over the Internet has become a common practice for consumers. Now, just in time for Black Friday, a group of Missouri University of Science and Technology students is putting that ability to comparison-shop in the palm of your hand.
A new spam campaign using false e-mails made to look like messages from the Social Security Administration is capable of stealing Social Security numbers and downloading malware onto victims’ home computers, says Gary Warner, director of computer forensics at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).
For girls, parents worry most about a loss of privacy and being vulnerable to sexual predators; for boys, parents are most concerned about access to pornographic material.
A revised draft publication on computer security guidance issued by NIST is focused on transforming the episodic information system certification and accreditation processes at federal agencies by reinforcing and specifying procedures for continuous monitoring and updating.
Physicists at NIST have demonstrated the first 'universal' programmable quantum information processor able to run any program allowed by quantum mechanics. The processor could be a module in a future quantum computer, which theoretically could solve some important problems that are intractable today.
Vast amounts of information that could hold the key to breakthroughs in environmental research will be made readily available through a network created by Oak Ridge National Laboratory and partners.
NYU Langone Medical Center is the first hospital in the Northeast to offer one of the world’s fastest and most radiation dose efficient computed tomography (CT) scanner. The Siemens SOMATOM Definition Flash can image ten times as fast as other clinical units, with an up to 90% dose reduction in radiation compared to conventional imaging. The scanner’s dual source technology allows NYU Langone Medical Center to provide new levels of patient care, especially for trauma, pediatric, cancer and cardiac patients.
Engineering researchers at the University of Arkansas have developed a unique and robust method to prevent cloning of passive radio frequency identification tags. The technology, based on one or more unique physical attributes of individual tags rather than information stored on them, will prevent the production of counterfeit tags and thus greatly enhance both security and privacy for government agencies, businesses and consumers.
Green IT Initiative looks at power consumption from the microchip to the data center. Will use Recycled HPC system to develop sustainable power consumption.
An upgrade to a Cray XT5 high-performance computing system deployed by the Department of Energy has made the “Jaguar” supercomputer the world’s fastest. Located at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Jaguar is the scientific research community’s most powerful computational tool for exploring solutions to some of today’s most difficult problems.