WCPO: UC-backed startup aims to use AI to detect heart disease
March 4, 2024
A University of Cincinnati-backed startup is developing explainable artificial intelligence to better diagnose coronary artery disease risk in women, WCPO reported.
March 4, 2024
A University of Cincinnati-backed startup is developing explainable artificial intelligence to better diagnose coronary artery disease risk in women, WCPO reported.
April 4, 2024
By combining existing mammograms with its artificial intelligence, a University of Cincinnati-backed startup hopes to detect heart disease and save lives, Spectrum News reported.
March 4, 2022
News outlets highlight a study by the University of Cincinnati that used the evolution of the microchip to predict advances in synthetic biology.
October 28, 2021
University of Cincinnati biomedical engineering graduate Jack Randall is developing a wearable safety device for runners and cyclists. Zoza, a small, wearable SOS device, can be attached to a shoe or zipper and is intended for endurance athletes who often don’t carry a phone or who travel through remote areas. A user can press a button to send an emergency alert and the device even works in locations where cell service is unavailable.
February 10, 2021
WVXU talks to UC College of Engineering and Applied Science professor Leyla Esfandiari about her point-of-care device that enables noninvasive point-of-care testing for cancer using biofluids.
July 6, 2022
Spectrum News highlights UC's Biology Meets Engineering program which gives high school students an introduction to STEM fields in a project sponsored by the National Science Foundation.
March 9, 2022
WVXU public radio highlighted a University of Cincinnati research project designed to shorten lines at airports like Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International.
January 14, 2021
WCPO talks to UC College of Engineering and Applied Science professor Sam Antoline and UC student Arshad Mohammed about the growing use of 3D printing for research and manufacturing.
August 19, 2022
UC College of Engineering and Applied Science assistant professor Yeongin Kim tells Local 12 about the new new wearable technology he and his research colleagues at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology developed. The wireless, chipless device is durable but comfortable and does not require bulky electronics.
February 11, 2022
Cincinnati Edition talks to University of Cincinnati computer engineering professors Ranga Vemuri and Rashi Jha and associate professor of economics Michael Jones about what Intel's proposed fabrication plants will mean for Ohio's economy and technology industry.