Emmanuel Kasigazi is part of a select group in the National Science Foundations Innovation Corps (NSF I-Corps) program, which trains researchers and students across the United States to turn their ideas into real-world products and services.
At the 41st Marketing Club of New York Silver Apples Awards Galaa celebration of the industrys most accomplished and generous leadersKatz School Industry Professor Lou Cohen received the Apple of Excellence award for Advocacy.
Three Katz School international students volunteered to share their experiences with New York City public school children as part of One to World, a New York Citybased global leadership and cultural exchange program.
During a book talk, Dr. Brian Williams, a trauma surgeon and Air Force veteran, invited students and faculty into the hardest chapters of his life as a doctor, public advocate and Black man navigating the twin crises of violence and racism in America.
A team of computer scientists, including Dr. Yucheng Xie, an assistant professor in the Department of Graduate Computer Science and Engineering, gives ordinary contributors to a shared AI model the ability to protect it from hidden attacks without needing access to the models internal code.
A multidisciplinary team blending data analytics, programming and creative design won the OpenSpace Prize in the NASA SpaceApps Challenge at NYU for transforming NASAs vast, number-heavy database of Near-Earth Objects into something people can actually see and understand.
Bella Chilczuk, a student in the Occupational Therapy Doctorate, shared findings from a project that shows how something as joyful and fundamental as play can strengthen families.
Could a tunnel through space and timelong a dream of science fictionever exist in theory? According to Arya Dutta, a Ph.D. student in Mathematics at the Katz School, the answer might be yes, at least on paper.
Lakshmikar Polamreddy, a Ph.D. candidate in mathematics, and Jialu Li, a student in the M.S. in Artificial Intelligence, published a study that challenges the popular belief that diffusion models imagine in the same way humans do.
A study, funded in part by the National Science Foundation, investigates a phenomenon known as Arnold diffusion, a process where seemingly nearly stable systems can drift unpredictably over long stretches of time.