Engadget: UC engineers create AI that can beat pilots in dogfights
June 9, 2020
Engadget cites UC research on drones that use fuzzy logic to beat pilots in aerial combat simulations.
June 9, 2020
Engadget cites UC research on drones that use fuzzy logic to beat pilots in aerial combat simulations.
November 20, 2020
The University of Cincinnati took part in a demonstration of unmanned aerial systems, demonstrating the untapped potential for drones for government and commercial applications.
September 15, 2021
UC College of Engineering and Applied Science professor Kelly Cohen talks about how co-op prepares UC engineering students for a career in aerospace.
September 13, 2021
UC aerospace engineering student Lynn Pickering explains to Impossible Engineering why the XV-3 aircraft revolutionized tilt-rotor technology that led to the Osprey.
February 28, 2023
University of Cincinnati aerospace engineering doctoral student Lynn Pickering is using Fuzzy Logic to create an artificial intelligence structure that is fair, usable, and understandable for humans. This is called Explainable Artificial Intelligence. Pickering is a recipient of the Fulbright Ghent University Award and was named Graduate Student Engineer of the Month by UC’s College of Engineering and Applied Science.
August 5, 2022
UC College of Engineering and Applied Science professor Kelly Cohen and his students will work with aerospace company VISIMO to develop better autonomous navigation in drones.
May 24, 2023
Good technologies make ripples, but great technologies make ruptures, University of Cincinnati Chief Innovation & Strategy Officer Ryan Hays wrote.
November 1, 2023
For decades, Clifford Larrabee pursued a lofty goal: to cure cancer. This summer, with a patent secured for a ground-breaking cancer drug delivery system, Larrabee and his co-inventor have left their mark in the ongoing fight against the disease.
February 28, 2024
Generative artificial intelligence is rapidly advancing and soon will be ubiquitous in everyday life, making us more productive and helping to solve complex problems while simultaneously creating new legal and ethical issues, a University of Cincinnati professor said. Jeffrey Shaffer, the Joseph S. Stern Professor of Practice and assistant professor-educator in UC’s Carl H. Lindner College of Business, sees AI as a tool that will transform lives, perhaps even more so than the internet did. He’s given presentations on AI and will teach a class about it in the fall, embracing the evolving technology in his life and in the classroom.
July 28, 2021
Yoonjee Park, assistant professor of chemical engineering at University of Cincinnati's College of Engineering and Applied Science, developed a biodegradable drug delivery device that is activated by light, which would allow for on-demand dosing and fewer side effects for treatment of posterior eye diseases. With recent funding awards from the National Institute of Health and a Young Investigator Award from Ohio Lions Eye Research Foundation, Park and her research team are testing the safety and efficacy of the device. In 2019, she also participated in UC’s Venture Lab business pre-accelerator.