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FICS Researchers Patent “Universal Testing Technique” to Detect Counterfeit Chips

In Carousel, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, In the Headlines, News, Research & Innovation, Security

This story was originally published on the ECE news website. An article recently published in the Academic Times profiled exciting new technology patented by researchers at the Florida Institute for Cybersecurity (FICS) Research which promises a new way to detect recycled (previously used) and counterfeit electronic parts, especially chips. The technology created by ECE Associate Professor Domenic Forte and ECE Associate Professor …

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UF collaborates with conservation foundation on coastal solutions

In Engineering School of Sustainable Infrastructure and Environment, Featured, News, Research & Innovation

The University of Florida’s newly established Center for Coastal Solutions (CCS) and Sanibel-Captiva Conservation Foundation (SCCF) have entered into a strategic collaboration to address coastal water quality hazards in order to strengthen the resiliency and sustainability of this unique coastal area in Florida.

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Exposing the Shortcuts: Improving Fairness of Artificial Intelligence in the Connected World

In AI University, Department of Computer and Information Science and Engineering, Featured, News, Research Grants

My T. Thai, Ph.D., professor in the Department of Computer & Information Science & Engineering and associate director of the Warren B. Nelms Institute for the Connected World, is developing software technologies that can explain how bias can creep into artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms.

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UF Engineers Develop New Membrane that Improves Blood Dialysis

In Carousel, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Research Grants

Researchers from the Department of Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering (MAE) in the Herbert Wertheim College of Engineering, led by Saeed Moghaddam, Knox T. Millsaps Professor in MAE, have developed a new hemodialysis membrane made of graphene oxide (GO), a single-atomic layered material, which has the promise of revolutionizing treatments for kidney dialysis patients.

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Visionary Leader in Artificial Intelligence Endows Professorship in Fully Homomorphic Encryption

In AI University, Featured, News, Security, Transformation

Dr. Walden “Wally” Rhines, son of the founding chair of the UF Department of Materials Science & Engineering (MSE) Dr. Frederick N. Rhines, is providing an endowment for a professorship in fully homomorphic encryption (FHE), a field in which Cornami, Inc., the AI company of which he is President and CEO, holds a leading edge position.

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UF Awarded NASA Contract to Build Space Exploration Device

In Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, ICYMI, In the Headlines, Research & Innovation

A team of University of Florida mechanical and aerospace engineering students, professors and researchers has been awarded a $12.5 million NASA contract to test and build a space exploration device over the next four years. UF’s team is led by experts John W. Conklin, Ph.D. and Peter Wass, Ph.D., a UF MAE associate professor and research scientist, respectively.

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Biomedical Engineer Studies Islet Cells to Uncover the Processes of Diabetes

In Featured, J Crayton Pruitt Family Department of Biomedical Engineering, News, Research & Innovation

Edward Phelps, Ph.D., assistant professor & J. Crayton Pruitt Family Term Fellow at the J. Crayton Pruitt Family Department of Biomedical Engineering, has received a $1.8M R01 grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to further his studies of the role of gamma Aminobutyric Acid (GABA) in the islet cells of the pancreas.

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With New Study, Allen Makes a Case for Cell Sex Reporting as Industry Standard

In Carousel, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, News, Research & Innovation

Josephine Allen, Ph.D., MSE, and her team comprised of MSE Ph.D. candidate and NIH Predoctoral Fellow Bryan James and J. Crayton Pruitt Family Department of Biomedical Engineering undergrad Paxton Guerrin observed that biomedical and biomaterials researchers and the journals publishing their papers rarely mentioned the sex of the cells involved in the studies. They knew how that data could potentially affect research results, and so they conducted their own analysis by surveying the literature of several top biomedical journals and found that cell sex was reported in only a small fraction (roughly 3%) of papers. That information and several other notable results prompted their own paper highlighting the findings entitled “Let’s Talk About Sex – Biological Sex is Underreported in Biomaterials Studies.”