Sending small electrical currents to the fingertips of someone operating a robotic arm can help surgeons during robot-assisted procedures, the researchers found.
An augmented reality app developed by a Texas A&M architecture professor aims to offer users easy-to-follow assembly instructions for furniture and other projects.
Cheryl Cato (left), Associate Vice President and Chief Technology Officer and M. Dee Childs (right), Texas A&M Vice President for IT and Chief Information Officer, congratulate “Dr. Pete” Marchbanks as he receives the Trailblazer Award from the Texas Association of State Systems for Computing and Communications (TASSCC). By Bobby…
A self-driving Uber car on the road in Pittsburgh. By Johanna Zmud, Texas A&M Transportation Institute, for The Conversation What do self-driving cars and teenage drivers have in common? Experience. Or, more accurately, a lack of experience. Teenage drivers – novice drivers of any age, actually – begin with little…
Bob Avant leads a panel on emerging drone technology in agriculture. By Gabe Saldana, Texas A&M University AgriLife Unmanned aircraft systems, known as drones or UAS, could be an important tool in boosting agricultural production to accommodate a roughly 30 percent global population increase to 9 billion people by 2050.
Texas A&M’s Diversity Accessibility Hackathon is a 24-hour event in which teams compete for $5,000 in prize money as they pursue ways to improve public accessibility on campus. The Hackathon, Feb. 17-18, is designed to stimulate dialogue about diversity and inclusion topics on campus in a collaborative environment, say organizers. Contestants will…