New research from The University of Queensland is exploring how algorithms and artificial intelligence-based systems can provide earlier, more accurate and potentially life-saving patient information to doctors and clinicians.
A research project aimed at developing a cost-effective and eco-friendly alternative to sand in construction material has earned Dr Mehdi Serati an Advance Queensland Industry Research Fellowship.
An innovative timber pavilion that capitalises on underutilised sawmill products has been recognised for its outstanding design at the recent Australian Timber Design Awards.
The Challenge was an exclusive event for UQ partner universities in India to participate in and asked students to develop a design concept that would improve the flood resilience of their home town, city or community.
A pioneering way to dry timber at Queensland’s largest sawmill near Maryborough is destined to help ease the nation’s timber shortage and give carbon emissions plenty of stick in the future.
For many people, nothing beats the taste and texture of a big juicy burger, but how do you recreate that eating experience with sustainable plant-based protein?
Not one but two from the Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology’s best and brightest female researchers have been nominated as finalists for the 2021 Women in Technology Award.
Digital technologies are now at the heart of our everyday lives, as anyone who has swapped their office for a videoconferencing screen, or downloaded a contact-tracing app, knows only too well.
Growing up in Mt Isa in Western Queensland, MineGeoTech founder and The University of Queensland Civil Engineering alumnus Dr John Player’s ties to the outback and mining sector are lifelong, but it was his first year of study away from the support of his local community that prompted him to fund a scholarship to encourage and support STEM students from remote areas.
The inaugural Educational Research & Innovation @ EAIT Community of Practice (ERI@EAIT CoP), coordinated by Melanie Fleming (Educational Researcher, Learning Enhancement Team, EAIT) met on the 20th of July 2021
It’s not easy to predict how rock will fracture when exposed to a blast hundreds of metres below the earth’s surface, but a piece of experimental equipment will take away the guess work for The University of Queensland’s blasting and fragmentation technology team.