
Improving Indoor Air Quality With More Effective, Long-Lasting Sensors
New low-cost technology from researchers at Carnegie Mellon University could help make indoor air quality sensors last longer and catch unsafe formaldehyde levels sooner.

Students Develop Tool To Help American Red Cross Estimate Shelter Needs After Earthquakes
The American Red Cross asked a team of Carnegie Mellon University students to develop a real-time forecasting tool to more accurately and efficiently predict shelter needs for people who have been forced to leave their homes.

Team Brings Lung Cancer Into Focus with 3D Imaging Innovation
A new NIH-funded collaboration is breaking down barriers to high-resolution, 3D imaging of tissues —technology that could revolutionize how doctors detect, diagnose and understand cancers like lung cancer.

Arm CEO Rene Haas Talks AI at President's Lecture Series
To kick off the academic year, Arm CEO Rene Haas joined Carnegie Mellon University President Farnam Jahanian in the first event of the 2025-26 President’s Lecture Series.

Possibility Propels New Academic Year at Carnegie Mellon
Classes begin on the first day of the fall semester of 2025 at Carnegie Mellon University.

Eight Carnegie Mellon Students Named SoftBank Group–Arm Fellows
Eight Carnegie Mellon University Ph.D. students have received the SoftBank Group–Arm Fellowship to support research at the intersection of artificial intelligence and human collaboration.

Laurie Heller Is Changing How We Understand, and Potentially Treat, Misophonia
Laurie Heller's years-long work in the Auditory Lab has yielded a groundbreaking study on misophonia, a condition where everyday sounds, like chewing or pen clicking, trigger intense negative emotional reactions.

What Happens in the Brain When it Learns Something New
Carnegie Mellon University researchers have identified specific neural connections that are especially sensitive to learning about causality. The discovery, while seemingly intuitive, could have widespread implications for understanding how humans learn and inform new ways to address learning challenges.

Rooted in Passion: At Orientation, New Tartans Dig In
First-Year Orientation supports new students in a successful transition to Carnegie Mellon.

The AI Tool That Could Make Manufacturing Faster and More Efficient — by Using Lego Bricks
A new AI-powered tool created by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University’s School of Computer Science could change the way we manufacture and build things.

Meditation Apps Deliver Real Health Benefits, Research Finds
Backed by emerging research, digital mindfulness tools are proving to be more than just a wellness trend. Studies show they can lower blood pressure, ease repetitive negative thinking and even influence gene expression related to inflammation.

New Robotic Agricultural Sensor Could Revolutionize Farming
Researchers invented a tool called SonicBoom that can find crops like apples based on the sound they make.