Sign language translator turns gestures into spoken letters
By far one of the greatest challenges of sign language has been to translate it for everyday folk that wouldn't know where to begin a conversation with the deaf. Read more
By far one of the greatest challenges of sign language has been to translate it for everyday folk that wouldn't know where to begin a conversation with the deaf. Read more
ubergizmo: Cornell students Charong Chen and Siyu Zhan have managed to come up with an electric keyboard that can create and playback its own composition. Read more
engadget: We here at Engadget are always fans of brain wave experiments, and so we were delighted when two Cornell University electrical engineering students, Chuck Moyes and Mengxiang Jiang, wrapped up a final project using brain waves in the best way possible: playing Pong. Read more
The Air Drano student project is essentially a system that detects the position of your fingers on a sheet of paper using a camera. Once the "hit position" is detected an audible sound is synthesized emulating either ... Read more
The intellectual merit of this research is in understanding the capabilities and limitations of imaging systems using diffractive angle-sensitive pixels to analyze the light field. Read more
Cornell ECE Alum Mark Adamiak EE '75, EE M.Eng. '76 was elected to the prestigious National Academy of Engineering (NAE). Read more
Systems across the computing spectrum, from cell phones to supercomputers, are increasingly using a heterogeneous mix of general-purpose multicores augmented with programmable graphics processing units (GPUs). Read more
Futurity: BEE Prof. Dan Luo has devised a method of “amplifying” very small samples of pathogen DNA, RNA, or proteins using synthetic DNA. ECE Prof Edwin Kan designed a computer chip that quickly responds to the amplified samples targeted by Luo’s method. Read more
Cornell ECE assistant professor A. Kevin Tang is one of 48 scientists and engineers across the United States to receive a prestigious Young Investigator Research Award from the US Air Force’s Office of Scientific Research. Read more
Professor Wicker teaches and conducts research into privacy-aware information networking technologies. His recent publications have attracted national attention, including print, television, and radio interviews. This attribution in the New Yorker is the latest evidence of a growing interest in protecting privacy in a digital world. Read more