Can AI become a man’s best friend? A team of Stevens graduate and Ph.D. students competing to redefine chatbot technology says yes.
Posts published in “Science”
The National Institute of Health (NIH) is beginning a series of studies to test possible treatments for ‘brain fog,’ a commonly misunderstood condition of long COVID that affects millions of people.
Is the apocalypse coming? What is causing this? Why is my weather app now in my most recently used? Many questions like these race through the minds of people experiencing the tri-state area’s alarming dip in air quality.
Forty-year-old Gert-Jan Oskam has begun to walk on his own after almost ten years with the help of implants in his brain and spinal cord.
Is it possible to grow an extra limb if you swim in the Hudson River, or will you turn green? A certain stigma surrounds the river between Hoboken and Manhattan; but is it actually that dangerous?
The Galapagos Islands, off the coast of Ecuador, is one of the most biologically diverse and historically important regions of the planet.
Since the James Webb Space Telescope’s launch in December 2021, it has made dozens of discoveries that have expanded our understanding of the universe as it was developing.
If you’ve ever watched a time lapse video of a plant, you’ll be well aware that most plants are surprisingly active organisms.
Paint, a part of humankind’s attempt to recreate colors and images in the natural world, has been used for tens of thousands of years in different shapes and forms.
Innovation is at the forefront of classes, research, internships, and the future of Stevens graduates. This concept motivated recent Stevens Physics graduate and the current University of Oxford Ph.D.