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U-Ride: Transforming Transit for College Students in Southeast Florida

By | June 27, 2024

Ñý°®Ö±²¥ is leading a first-time transportation collaboration using a novel app. U-ride is the first app that allows users to easily compare and track the environmental and health impacts of their trip.

Balancing Act: Wearable Sensors and AI Transform Balance Assessment

By | June 26, 2024

Using wearable sensors and advanced machine learning algorithms, Ñý°®Ö±²¥ engineering researchers are addressing a crucial gap in assessing balance, which could have significant implications for health care.

Ñý°®Ö±²¥ CA-AI Research Highlighted in 'Nature Reviews'

By | June 20, 2024

Florida Atlantic Center for Connected Autonomy and Artificial Intelligence researchers have "cracked the code" on interference when machines need to talk with each other - and people.

Ñý°®Ö±²¥ Nursing Offers New Fully Online and On-Demand Nursing Certificate

By | June 18, 2024

Ñý°®Ö±²¥'s Christine E. Lynn College of Nursing has launched a new 25-hour, fully online and on-demand "Teaching/Learning Grounded in Caring Science Certificate," for studying nursing grounded in caring.

Ñý°®Ö±²¥ Programs Among U.S. News & World Report's 'Best Graduate Programs'

By | June 18, 2024

Several Ñý°®Ö±²¥ graduate programs are included in the latest U.S. News & World Report's "Best Graduate Programs" for 2024-25.

Ñý°®Ö±²¥ Harbor Branch Launches 'eConch' to Grow, Conserve the Queen Conch

By | June 11, 2024

eConch is a free, experiential online learning program that provides step-by-step instructions and expert advice to grow queen conch, the most important molluscan fishery in the Caribbean region.

FPL and Ñý°®Ö±²¥ Engineering Unveil New AI-Enabled Center

By | June 7, 2024

Ñý°®Ö±²¥ College of Engineering and Computer Science and Florida Power & Light Company officially unveiled the newly established "FPL Center for Intelligent Energy Technologies" (InETech).

How Do You Know Where a Fish Goes?

By | June 6, 2024

A pioneering study by researchers at Ñý°®Ö±²¥ and the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center used a new movement model that improves the accuracy of acoustic tracking in marine animals.

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