Soothing ‘Rhythm Robots’ Blend Art and Engineering
Naomi Leonard ’85’s robot installation is one of the interdisciplinary projects in CreativeX
Naomi Leonard ’85’s robot installation is one of the interdisciplinary projects in CreativeX
Speakers at the inaugural N.J. AI Summit see a bright future for artificial intelligence in Princeton and its backyard
Building technology that works for workers in the gig economy — as well as consumers
Wilson Award winner Fei-Fei Li ’99, Madison Medalist John Fitzpatrick *78 speak about their paths in science
“The food waste problem is huge,” says assistant professor Yasaman Ghasempour
PAW talked to students and faculty and heard all kinds of ways the tools are being used
‘Ikigai is a great example of starting the design process with understanding a need’
Six Princetonians were on Time magazine’s list of the 100 most influential people in AI
Details about the timeline, organization, and funding are to come, but the governor says the message is “we want to basically plant a flag and say, artificial intelligence is here...
Their critique of AI employment hiring tools won them a spot on Time magazine’s “Most Influential People in AI” list
Big Bird’s 117 mph pace has raised the bar for electric speedboats
James Tralie ’19 is there when NASA makes news, explaining the deep science of historic achievements and having the time of his life doing it.
‘We are hoping it will have an enormous impact,’ Houck says of quantum science
Tang was in the first cohort of Princeton’s experimental Integrated Science Curriculum
Even though dark matter can’t be imaged directly, Redmond explains, it distorts the light from galaxies behind it
Princeton is ‘actually taking the bull by the horns, so to say, and radically transforming the energy infrastructure on campus’
Artificial intelligence is changing higher education. Will it be for the best?
‘It’s thinking about how those lines of code impact the project that impacts the broader society,’ said Jeremiah Giordani ’25
‘What kind of a decision are we making here? And what are the human impacts of what we’re doing?’