Carnegie Mellon University researchers are using sound to help people with hand tremors, cerebral palsy, nervous system damage, and other fine-motor limitations enjoy video games.
Sometimes the right tool for the right job appears almost out of nowhere. That was certainly the case for [Jonathan] who came across an unusual but well-designed robot at a secondhand shop. The ...
ChatGPT was released almost four years ago, and with it came… panic. AI will undoubtedly alter the workforce, media and education. And after four years of living with it, Staples is only beginning to ...
UC San Diego cognitive scientist Philip Guo created Python Tutor, a free tool that makes code “visible” step by step. The research behind it earned a Test of Time award, recog ...
Turing Award winners Gilles Brassard and Charles Bennett pioneered ideas that are now foundational to quantum computers and ...
The rush to embrace generative AI is damaging the games industry's reputation, and obscuring the genuinely useful applications of machine learning. We need to t ...
Lawyer Ali Mirsaidi gives a rundown of the legal and reputational complexities surrounding the use of AI in game development ...
GameRant chats with MLB The Show 26 developers Chris Gill and Ramone Russell about the difficulties and triumphs of making an ...
Markus Persson never followed up his miracle creation. Neither did Tetris’ Alexey Pajitnov. How come only one of them could ...
Unlike most students in Northwestern’s Integrated Science Program, Weinberg junior Justin Dynes was unaware that the advanced natural science and mathematics curriculum existed. “I applied to ...
Entrepreneur Media and Athletes First are bringing together the biggest names in business and sports.
Anna Green never imagined that her love for video games would lead to a trip to San Francisco to present her work to one of ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results