Check out the latest media coverage of Duke electrical and computer engineering research and education.
Duke ECE in the News
American Physical Society |
Building a Quantum Workforce Doesn’t Just Mean Graduating More Ph.D.s
Emily Edwards discusses the need for inclusivity in STEM fields from a young age in working to address future quantum needs
Interesting Engineering |
US Researchers Determine the Limits of Energy Absorption in Transparent Materials
Willie Padilla has determined the theoretical limits of how much electromagnetic energy a transparent material can absorb
Analytics Magazine |
10 Underrated Women in AI to Watchout For
Cynthia Rudin is named in a roundup of unsung women who are enriching the AI field with innovations that promise a future where technology is as diverse as the society it serves
The New York Times |
China's Rush to Dominate A.I. Comes With a Twist: It Depends on U.S. Technology
Yiran Chen explains why Chinese investments in tech are made for quick turnarounds
SPIE |
Beyond the Black Box
Cynthia Rudin of Duke University discusses interpretable deep learning at SPIE Medical Imaging
Physics World |
MadRad Fools Self-Driving Cars
A team in the US led by Duke University’s Miroslav Pajic and Tingjun Chen have created a system called MadRadar, which shows how attacks on car sensors could be done
HPC Wire |
CCC Releases Updated Report on Quantum Computing Progress
The Computing Community Consortium (CCC) has released an updated report on quantum computing progress in the past five years, based on a workshop held in the spring 2023, led in part by Kenneth Brown
AP News |
Contrary to Politicians’ Claims, Offshore Wind Farms Don’t Kill Whales
Doug Nowacek is collecting data near offshore wind farms to monitor any possible impacts short of fatality for whales in the area
News & Observer |
NC Quantum Computing Bullish on a Coveted Breakthrough
ECE Professor Jungsang Kim is confident that quantum computers will reach "quantum superiority" over conventional computers within his lifetime
Forbes |
"30 Under 30" Consumer Technology
New ECE Professor Emily Wenger was selected for the 2024 Forbes 30 under 30 list for her work on Glaze, a tool designed to safeguard artists’ works from generative AI models.