News

  • Vanderbilt University

    Demanding double duty teaches how to take a hit and keep going

    Athletes and ROTC members honored at annual Dean’s dinner. Student athletes and ROTC cadets honored at annual dinner Sarah Goodale is a competitor. As a biomedical engineering undergraduate, she was an important member of the Vanderbilt Women’s Track and Field team, a force in the pentathlon and heptathlon. She still… Read More

    Feb. 12, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Study habits author, NSBE leader is Vanderbilt Engineers Week speaker, Feb. 20

    Karl Reid has had great success: two degrees in engineering from MIT, a doctorate in education from Harvard and a fruitful career—first in the software industry, then in higher education, and now as executive director of a professional engineering society. “But it didn’t come easily,” Reid said. Karl Reid In… Read More

    Feb. 6, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Grad students will use travel grants to attend world’s largest sports medicine conference

    Three engineering graduate students whose research focus is biomechanics and assistive technologies will attend the world’s largest sports medicine conference thanks to spring 2020 travel grants from the Vanderbilt Graduate School’s  Russell G. Hamilton Graduate Leadership Institute. Maura Eveld Maura Eveld, Emily Matijevich and Rachel Teater are mechanical engineering… Read More

    Feb. 5, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    CS undergrad exploring radioisotope power named to Forbes 30 Under 30 List

    An engineering undergraduate who leads a team developing a next-generation radioisotope power system to provide non-stop power for months to years at a time has been named to the Forbes‘30 Under 30 List. Tyler Bernstein, Class of 2020, is CEO and co-founder of Zeno Power, which recently finished in… Read More

    Feb. 4, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Meet Abbey Carlson, engineer, golfer, rocket builder and pilot

    The ability to play top-level golf would be enough for most college students. But it barely touches the surface of what drives Vanderbilt standout Abbey Carlson. Carlson, who recently earned an invitation into the Augusta National Women’s Amateur this April, is arguably America’s most interesting women’s golfer. She possesses a… Read More

    Feb. 1, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    ME and VADL alumnus makes Forbes’ 30 Under 30 list with solar cell startup

    Kevin Bush, BE’14, has been named to the Forbes’ 30 Under 30 List, which highlights “600 revolutionaries in 20 industries changing the course—and the face—of business and society.” Bush was selected in the energy sector. In all, five Vanderbilt University alumni were named by Forbes this year; three are… Read More

    Jan. 30, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Oguz uses ACCRE supercomputer daily for medical image analysis

    For seventeen years, Vanderbilt students and researchers have analyzed data with a method much faster than any normal laptop: a supercomputer steps away from the Commons Center. The Advanced Computing Center for Research and Education (ACCRE), which originated in 2003, is housed in the Hill Center, between the Commons… Read More

    Jan. 30, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    GPS co-creator is E-Week speaker at engineering school

    The chief engineer for design and development of the Global Positioning System and its atomic clocks will visit the School of Engineering as part of 2020 National Engineers Week events, Feb. 17-21, at Vanderbilt University. Hugo Fruehauf Hugo Fruehauf, one of four engineers who created the Global Positioning System, will… Read More

    Jan. 28, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Film Detective helps kids with autism interpret actors’ actions

      Elementary school teachers seemed particularly excited about Film Detective, a game to help adolescents on the autism spectrum learn to decode social scenarios, at the 7th annual ED Games Expo Jan. 9 in Washington, D.C. “They liked how engaging the game is, using television and movie clips as… Read More

    Jan. 27, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    A path toward shapeshifting new materials—Engineering’s Hall Lecture Feb. 12

    Next-generation materials will be defined by their ability to adapt, change their properties, change their shape—shapeshifters. “We want to be able to make material that can flow when it wants to flow, that can be rigid when it needs to be rigid, that can appear one way or appear another… Read More

    Jan. 24, 2020