Four faculty members honored for excellence in mentoring graduate students
Four Princeton University faculty members have been named recipients of the Graduate Mentoring Awards by the McGraw Center for Teaching and Learning and will be honored during the Graduate School’s virtual Hooding ceremony at 4 p.m., Friday, May 29.
AI tool gives doctors a new look at the lungs in treating COVID-19
Spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic, Princeton researchers have developed a diagnostic tool to analyze chest X-rays for patterns in diseased lungs.
Princeton engineering team to use NSF RAPID grant to investigate asymptomatic spread of COVID-19, test strategies for prevention
A National Science Foundation grant will support Princeton researchers studying how COVID-19 may be spread by people without symptoms through everyday social interactions involving breathing and speaking.
COVID-19′s silent spread: Princeton researchers explore how symptomless transmission helps pathogens thriveCOVID-19′s silent spread
COVID-19′s rapid spread throughout the world has been fueled in part by the virus’ ability to be transmitted by people who are not showing symptoms of infection.
Three innovative projects selected to receive funding from the Schmidt Transformative Technology Fund
Three research endeavors aimed at fundamental challenges in health, information technology and water conservation have been selected for funding through the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Transformative Technology Fund.
Four Princeton professors elected to National Academy of Sciences
Princeton professors Anne Case, Jennifer Rexford, Suzanne Staggs and Elke Weber have been named members of the National Academy of Sciences in recognition of their distinguished and continuing achievements in original research.
NSF RAPID grant backs Princeton research to track and contain pandemic
The National Science Foundation has awarded emergency grants to two teams of Princeton researchers developing ways to better track and contain pandemics including COVID-19.
Loners help society survive, say Princeton ecologists
It isn’t easy being a loner — someone who resists the pull of the crowd, who marches to their own drummer.
New mathematical model can more effectively track epidemics
As COVID-19 spreads worldwide, leaders are relying on mathematical models to make public health and economic decisions.
THIS LECTURE HAS BEEN CANCELLED: PACM DISTINGUISHED LECTURE: Cynthia Dwork, Harvard University, March 26, 2020 at 8:00 PM Jadwin A10
Differential Privacy: The Mathematical Bulwark against Reidentification and Reconstruction