What happens when you don't have enough medical images to train an AI to recognize X-rays? Plug the gaps with photos of cats and other everyday pictures.
15-year-old San Jose teenager Amy Dunphy has spent the past 2.5 years inventing a chemical that will protect your skin against the perils of poison oak.
Sony has shown off a new prototype sensor that features an on-chip polarization filter capable of selectively reducing glare and reflections in images.
Researchers have shown how smartphones, 3D printers, and an old microscope can make movies of living cells, minus the need for ultra-expensive equipment.
Researchers have developed an AI system able to identify the unique "breathprint" for 17 different diseases -- ranging from kidney cancer to Parkinson's.
Researchers say they’ve developed an adaptable and maneuverable machine by modeling their drones off of the most sophisticated fliers on earth — birds.
The new series is a partnership with DTS, designed to show off its Headphone:X technology, which simulates surround-sound in a pair of regular headphones.
Are you worried that the "wonder material" graphene is running out of amazing abilities? Not so fast! Researchers have just found it can detect cancer, too.
More than three billion stars, galaxies, and celestial light sources were captured in the half-million exposures, each of which was about 45 seconds long.
The first-ever Unified Robotics Championship sees students pit plastic against plastic in a sumo-style robot battle to push the competitor out of the ring.
YouTube filmmaker Casey Neistat has won Christmas with an epic holiday video starring a monstrous drone capable of lifting him skyward while snowboarding.
In designing its new infrared camera, NASA engineers looked to nature for inspiration, landing on the spiked eyes of moths that help them see in the dark.
-Researchers at the U.K.'s University of Glasgow are working on 3D-printing technology that can potentially help people who have lost limbs in explosions.
Photographers could say goodbye to carrying around diffusion panels at different intensities, as this transparent LCD screen will actually diffuse light.