Research reveals why some images feel pleasing while others uncomfortable. The brain prefers visuals that cost less energy.
What might the second quantum revolution mean for science, technology and our understanding of reality itself?
A demographic dividend that was supposed to power Africa’s largest economy into the front rank of 21st century nations is rapidly ...
In 1900, a team of sponge divers off the Greek island of Antikythera surfaced with more than they bargained for. Among the ...
ASPI’s Critical Technology Tracker now covers global research efforts into 74 technologies, giving policymakers, industry and ...
At a small local chapter meeting of a professional society, Gordon Moore's talk laid out the rudiments of what would become ...
Entrepreneurship became another key thread in her time at Tech. Through the CREATE-X program, Alade and her co-founders ...
The report released Tuesday likens the situation to the “Great Divergence” of the industrial revolution, when many Western ...
Students Districtwide to Participate in AI Events and Activities Broward County Public Schools (BCPS) is excited to celebrate ...
Initiative dubbed 'Manhattan Project 2.0' but unlike its predecessor, hinges on mobilizing private sector investment ...
One of the hottest Stanford CS courses this semester embraces rather than bans AI coding tools like Cursor and Claude.
By solving tough problems in chemistry, security, and planning, quantum computing points to better drugs, safer information, and more efficient logistics.