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Improving traffic signal timing with a handful of connected vehicles
Communities could reduce costs and cut vehicle emissions—all in the name of shortening your trip.
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Spatial atlas of the human ovary with cell-level resolution will bolster reproductive research
Most human oocytes never get a chance to mature into eggs—a new study sheds light on why.
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Better battery manufacturing: Robotic lab vets new reaction design strategy
Mixing unconventional ingredients in just the right order can make complex materials with fewer impurities. The robotic lab that tested…
Featured Topics
Campus & Community
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The Highest Honor
Michigan Engineering counts 35 living NAE members among its ranks, and The Michigan Engineer has undertaken a multi-year mission to photograph them.
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Leader in robotics at U-M and beyond elected to National Academy of Engineering
Dawn Tilbury is recognized for advances in manufacturing network control and human-robot interaction, as well as engineering leadership.
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Mariel Lavieri selected to join the New Voices program of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine
The U-M industrial and operations engineer is recognized for excellence in research related to human health as well as championing diversity, equity and inclusion.
In the News
Interesting Engineering
New York Times
Scientific American
Research
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New reactor could save millions when making ingredients for plastics and rubber from natural gas
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Targeting multiple COVID variants through the twist in the spike protein
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Bridge in a box: Unlocking origami’s power to produce load-bearing structures
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Explaining a supernova’s ‘string of pearls’
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Auto industry deadlines loom for impaired-driver detection tech, U-M offers a low-cost solution
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Human stem cells coaxed to mimic the very early central nervous system
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Widely used AI tool for early sepsis detection may be cribbing doctors’ suspicions
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Leader in robotics at U-M and beyond elected to National Academy of Engineering
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Mariel Lavieri selected to join the New Voices program of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine
Features
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The Highest Honor
Michigan Engineering counts 35 living NAE members among its ranks, and The Michigan Engineer has undertaken a multi-year mission to photograph them.