News
UVA Engineering's faculty and students work to improve human health and create a sustainable and secure future.
-
Say Goodbye to the Memory Wall
Researchers in the University of Virginia’s Department of Computer Science and Charles L. Brown Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering are leading a $29.7 million research effort to remove.
-
A Brain Trust Approach
Decarbonizing heavy freight trucks won’t be easy; no technology today has the power and efficiency to replace diesel engines for moving goods over long distances.
-
Reaping the Rewards of Research Growth
UVA's Department of Biomedical Engineering Shows Just What Can Happen When Research Grows 114% in Seven Years.
-
Announcing the Tiffany and Matthew Link Fellowship
A New Opportunity for Graduate Students in Biomedical Engineering
-
UVA Joins Forces with the Virginia Department of Elections in Statewide Effort to Prepare Future Cybersecurity Leaders for Protecting Critical Infrastructure
-
Putting It All on the Line
UVA Students Test Their Code in a Robot Competition that Relies on Teamwork
-
Science Technology and Society Professor Calls Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act Big, Not Transformational
Peter Norton, a historian in the Department of Engineering and Society, told the Associated Press the $1 trillion infrastructure bill is more of the same.
-
Grad Students Learn Construction Industry on Site of Alderman Library Renovation
Participants in a new civil engineering course, Construction Practice, shadow team members to see firsthand the collaboration it takes to manage a large building project.
-
Second-Edition Textbook on Technology and Society Aspires to Make a Difference
-
Construction Practice: Grad Students Learn Industry Via Alderman Library Renovation
A new graduate-level course called “Construction Practice” allows students to shadow construction team members who are working on the Alderman Library renovation.
-
How Do We Make Machines Smarter than Alexa and Siri?
A UVA Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Ph.D. Student is Developing a New Type of Memory that Could Give Artificial Intelligence a Big Push Forward
-
What Fossil Preparators Can Teach Us About More Inclusive Science
For the National Academies’ Issues in Science and Technology, Engineering and Society assistant professor Caitlin Wylie argues making real scientific contributions takes skill, but not necessarily a degree — so let’s use that knowledge to open doors to more people.