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Princeton Engineering’s 2023 Women’s Empowerment Week included a panel discussion on networking and creating community, featuring (from left) Sonali Majumdar, the Graduate School’s assistant dean for professional development; and Jerelle Joseph and Michele Sarazen, both assistant professors of chemical and biological engineering. The discussion was moderated by Julie Yun (far left), the engineering school’s associate dean for diversity and inclusion. Photo by Tori Repp/Fotobuddy Creating and leading: Celebrating Women’s History Month
Princeton Engineering celebrates the outstanding work of our women students, researchers, educators and leaders. This year, the Office of Diversity and Inclusion held a series of Women’s Empowerment Week events, open to all and dedicated to uplifting the voices of women, navigating challenges, and developing leadership.
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Princeton researchers have developed a method to verify the strength of random number generators that form the basis of most encryption systems. Proof of randomness builds future of digital security
Princeton researchers have developed a method to verify the strength of random number generators that play a key role in encryption.
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A Princeton-led team of researchers and gamers has mapped every neuron and synapse in the brain of an adult fruit fly. Video still from Amy Sterling / FlyWire / Princeton Mapping an entire (fly) brain: A step toward understanding diseases of the human brain
After years of painstaking effort, a Princeton-led team has successfully mapped every neuron and synapse in the brain of an adult female fruit fly.
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Coalition Seeks To Protect Internet From Weaknesses Of Connected Devices
An organization of academics and industry leaders released a report today that provides guidance on how to build security and privacy protections into the emerging internet of things (IoT). The report emphasizes several recommendations for internet-connected devices, ranging from improved procedures for updating software on those devices to ensuring that those devices can continue to…
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Brian Kernighan Kernighan discusses ‘Millions, Billions, Zillions: Defending Yourself in a World of Too Many Numbers’
Brian Kernighan, a professor of computer science, wants to help everyone, regardless of their math background, navigate the dazzling array of numbers flung around by journalists, advertisers and politicians every day. In his latest book, "Millions, Billions, Zillions: Defending Yourself in a World of Too Many Numbers," published this month by Princeton University Press, he…
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An offshore wind farm near Block Island in Rhode Island, pictured, is one of only a few currently in operation in the United States. Princeton’s Net-Zero America study calls for unprecedented growth in wind power to decarbonize the economy by mid-century. Net-Zero America in action: America’s windy coastlines and scaling offshore wind power
Two experts in wind flows and energy technologies discuss the history and future of the U.S. wind industry in light of the Biden administration’s approval for what will be the largest U.S. offshore wind farm to date, an 84-turbine farm off the coast of Martha’s Vineyard.
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Professor J.P. Singh teaches an upper-level computer science course called “Web3: Blockchains, Cryptocurrencies, and Decentralization.” Photos by Sameer A. Khan/Fotobuddy ‘The time is now’ to get blockchain right
Jaswinder Pal (J.P.) Singh ’87 is leading Princeton University’s DeCenter to convene many disciplines and sectors to guide the evolution of blockchain as a technology that allows people to achieve trust without central intermediaries, potentially decentralizing conventional power structures in society.
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From left, Joanna Zhang, a postdoctoral researcher; Ellen Dobrijevic, Class of 2017; and Robert Prud’homme, a professor of chemical and biological engineering, work to increase medicines’ effectiveness in the developing world. Photo by David Kelly Crow Life-saving medicines grow from fundamental chemistry, win Gates Foundation backing
Princeton research helps deliver critical medicines to the developing world.
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‘Awesome professor’ and ‘dream job’ in industry were pivotal for computer architect
Ruby Lee, the Forrest G. Hamrick Professor in Engineering and professor of electrical and computer engineering, reflects on her heritage and career pathway.
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Fusion of multiple disciplines on display at Bioengineering Day
When graduate student Yogesh Goyal told an audience at Princeton University in October how his research could help doctors diagnose patients with difficult-to-characterize congenital disorders, he was describing more than a potential medical breakthrough.