Standing at the entrance, it was easy to envision what a gathering might have felt like there, with the people watching from the steps while the priest put on a show in the center.
Wearable Sensors Could Improve Treatment for Motor-Skill Impairments Every year in the United States almost 800,000 people suffer a stroke, an affliction which results in blood flow being cut off from the brain. Strokes can impair mobility, speech, and cognition. The recovery process and the ability to return to normal life can be daunting for…
Along with five other winning teams, their research projects will each receive $15,000 in backing from UTRF to further explore their ideas.
Called a “smart joint” system, the technology has a number of key features and applications and is characterized by being lightweight, flexible, inexpensive, and easy-to-install.
“Vandalism, excitement, revenge, crime concealment, extremism or terrorism,” are the six factors most likely to motivate arsonists, Icove told WCQS.
A team of faculty and students from UT’s Tickle College of Engineering displayed a true can-do effort this holiday season as they engaged in a friendly competition that collected food for the needy. The “CANstruction” competition brought together teams throughout the area in a contest to see who could build the most elaborate displays out…
“I am honored to have been chosen for this position,” said George, who has decades of experience with both ORNL and UT’s Department of Materials Science and Engineering.
Through her role with CURENT, as a researcher, and as a professor of electrical engineering and computer science at UT, Liu has helped pioneer many of the advancements in the safeguarding of the nation’s power grid
Led by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s Highway Safety Research Center, the CSCRS unites leading programs in transportation research, planning, public health, data science, and engineering, with UNC, UT, Duke University, Florida Atlantic University, and the University of California, Berkeley, all taking part.
“Dr. Parker brings with her a wealth of experience professionally and a great depth of respect from faculty in our college,” said Dean Wayne Davis.
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Tennessee Engineer is published in the spring and fall by the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tickle College of Engineering for alumni, faculty, staff, and friends of the college.
The college’s annual report is published every year in the fall.