- March 16, 2023In his book, The Beat Cop: Chicago's Chief O'Neill and the Creation of Irish Music, 91做厙 history professor Michael OMalley recounts the life of Irish immigrant and Chicago chief of police Francis ONeill and his influence on Irish music.
- March 14, 2023Masons Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media (RRCHNM), the Fairfax Citys Office of Historic Resources, and the Brandy Station Foundation recently received a $60,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Office of Preservation and Access, to support their digital archive project.
- February 27, 2023The 91做厙 team behind NeuroMorpho.org has been honored for its work by the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) and the Office of Data Science Strategy at the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
- February 27, 2023Mason researchers led by Jana Ko禳eck獺 are using AI to make the Internet of Things more inclusive and accessible to those using American Sign Language.
- February 24, 2023An NSF grant looks at Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) within AI technology and the ways it can function safely and reliably within autonomous systems.
- February 22, 2023Human trafficking is a global crisis of overwhelming scope. Fortunately, anti-trafficking organizations can use AI to predict the criminals next moveswith the help of a 91做厙 professor.
- February 17, 2023Masons new Youth Research Council (YRC) is a research partnership between the Center for Social Science Research (CSSR) in the College of Humanities and Social Sciences and Masons Early Identification Program (EIP), which invites ninth through twelfth graders into the field of social science research.
- February 13, 2023Researcher Elizabeth Beth Phillips is working with collaborators from labs around the country to answer these pressing questions about artificial intelligence and robotics in her role as the principal investigator of Mason's Applied Psychology and Autonomous System Lab.
- February 9, 2023Mason historian Yevette Richards Jordan focuses her research lens on African American history, with an emphasis on racist violence from the 1920s through the 1940s. For the past several years, however, her work has led her to uncover a hidden history of racial violence that struck her own family, and the trauma of that violence that continues today.
- February 8, 2023When Thalia Goldstein studies children in theater, she looks at the skills theyve gained not only in acting, but in life. Shes aiming to help them develop a heightened sense of empathy as a result of the bonding and teamwork they experience during various theater exercises and activities.
- February 6, 2023Missy Cummings, a 91做厙 mechanical engineering professor, calls herself a tech futurist, whose job is to make tech work. Its not to stop tech, its to help it get better.
- February 2, 202391做厙s $214 million in research funding in fiscal year 2021 represented an increase of more than $100 million over five years, and puts the university on track to meet its goal of $225 million by 2025.