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IMAGE: A new tool using an artificial intelligence platform may help doctors better prepare patients for surgery. Mohammad Rahman, a Purdue University associate professor of management, and his team developed the. view more
Credit: Purdue University/Mohammad Rahman
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - A new tool using an artificial intelligence platform may help doctors better prepare patients for surgery.
Mohammad Rahman, a Purdue University associate professor of management, and his team developed the tool to help improve health care outcomes. They have received a Phase I SBIR grant from the National Science Foundation to support their work. We created patent-pending algorithms that use artificial intelligence technology to help hospitals and doctors better treat patients, Rahman said. Two big projects we are currently focused on are looking at improved peer-to-peer learning for doctors and quantifying how the comorbidities of patients influence their surgical outcome
Virtual panel of startup, commercialization experts to explore tech transfer in Indiana
Startup leaders from Purdue University and across the state of Indiana will provide insights into technology transfer during The Frameworx Tech Transfer in Indiana virtual panel event. (Purdue University image)
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Startup leaders from Purdue University and across the state of Indiana will provide insights into technology transfer during a virtual panel event Feb. 18.
The Frameworx Tech Transfer in Indiana panel also will feature startups from Indiana University and the University of Notre Dame. BioCrossroads, which released a report on tech transfer in Indiana, is hosting the event.
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IMAGE: Purdue University innovators developed and are testing a novel construction robotic system that uses an innovative mechanical design with advances in computer vision sensing technology to work in a construction. view more
Credit: Jiansong Zhang/Purdue University
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Emerging robotics technology may soon help construction companies and contractors create buildings in less time at higher quality and at lower costs.
Purdue University innovators developed and are testing a novel construction robotic system that uses an innovative mechanical design with advances in computer vision sensing technology to work in a construction setting.
The technology was developed with support from the National Science Foundation.
Adranos receives $5.1 million in incentives for Indiana-based manufacturing plant
Adranos plans to construct a facility in the Purdue Research Park of West Lafayette to manufacture solid rocket fuel. (Image provided)
Plant will enable large-scale manufacturing of Adranos’s proprietary solid rocket fuel, ALITEC
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Adranos Inc., a Purdue University-affiliated company that has developed a high-performance, solid rocket fuel called ALITEC for long-range missile and space launch systems, announced plans Wednesday (Feb. 3) to construct a facility in the Purdue Research Park of West Lafayette to manufacture ALITEC in support of various launch systems, including hypersonic systems.
The company has obtained $5.1 million in land, funding and tax credits, collectively from Purdue Research Foundation and the Indiana Economic Development Corporation.