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Northeastern partners with entrepreneur David Roux to launch the Roux Institute at Northeastern in Portland, Maine

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The G7 wants to regulate artificial intelligence. Should the US get on board?

Can’t-miss events for the second half of January 2020 in Northeastern’s global network

Science & Technology

Chemists are training machine learning algorithms used by Facebook and Google to find new molecules

Science & Technology

This T-shirt could make you invisible to deep neural networks

Science & Technology

Northeastern University launches the Institute for the Wireless Internet of Things

Northeastern’s Seattle Campus convenes leaders in business, government, and academia to discuss the impact of artificial intelligence

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Northeastern University launches Institute for Experiential Artificial Intelligence

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Can’t-miss events in Northeastern University’s global network in October 2019

Science & Technology

Northeastern researchers receive National Science Foundation grant to train robots to seamlessly pass objects back and forth with humans

The artificial intelligence race will hinge in part upon a renewed desire by the government to retain international students who have earned degrees in the U.S., Northeastern President Joseph E. Aoun said in a one-on-one discussion with Steven Walker, director of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. Photo by Zach Gibson for Northeastern

Northeastern University models a partnership of academia, industry, and government to help solve defense problems in the United States

A close up of a radio and server system in the lab of Tommaso Melodia, the William Lincoln Smith Chair Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Northeastern. Colosseum, a massive testbed for wireless systems, will arrive at Northeastern in November. It can process more information in a single second than is estimated to be held in the entire print collection of the Library of Congress. Photo by Ruby Wallau/Northeastern University

Northeastern University to design the wireless networks of the future using world’s most powerful radio frequency emulator