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Nov 21, 2025

New Implant Designed to Transform Understanding of the 'Gut-Brain'

Dartmouth Engineering Professor Alexander Boys, together with researchers from the University of Cambridge, have created a device that can be placed between the layers of the colon and, for the first time, directly measure electrical signals in the 'second brain in our guts.'

Nov 20, 2025 | Dartmouth Engineer

Leading Thoughts: "A Model Approach"

Oct 14, 2025 | Dartmouth News

Meet the New House Faculty Fellows

environment coastal & offshore

Nov 19, 2025

Undersea Storms Are Melting Antarctic Glaciers from Below

Features research co-authored by Professor Yoshihiro Nakayama, that describes storm-like ocean circulation patterns beneath Antarctic ice shelves that could cause aggressive melting with major implications for global sea-level rise projections.

EdTech

Nov 11, 2025

AI in Computer Science Education: Closing the New Digital Divide in K–12

Professor Rafe Steinhauer is quoted in an article about efforts in K-12 schools to integrate generative AI guidelines and instruction into curricula and policy. "[School] districts are never going to have more power to shape the use of GenAI in their communities than right now, so it's imperative that they act collectively, guided by their core educational values," said Steinhauer.

MIT Sloan School of Management

Nov 03, 2025

AI agents, tech circularity: What’s ahead for platforms in 2026

Professor Geoffrey Parker is one of four experts outlining four emerging trends that show where platforms are heading next. "The code assistance is certainly here," said Parker. "It's valuable, but the tech debt is actually a strategic risk and could be really expensive, especially for incumbent organizations."

The Chronicle of Higher Education

Oct 29, 2025

How to Restore Joy to the Classroom

Professor Eugene Korsunskiy and his "Joy Cards" are included in an article about finding joy in the classroom. Each card contains an activity designed to elicit joy.

Research Quick Takes

The three study coauthors

Nov 20, 2025

Toward Optimal Auctions

PhD student Mai Pham, will present her paper, coauthored with professors Vikrant Vaze and Peter Chin, titled "Advancing Differentiable Mechanism Design: Neural architectures for combinatorial auctions" for a workshop at the Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems. Although auctions are considered an effective way of allocating limited resources when demand is high, designing auctions that are simultaneously optimal for the participants, system operator, and greater society is challenging. The paper presents a new approach that leverages modern deep learning architectures and algorithms to meet this challenge.

Becca Thomson accepting her awards

Nov 20, 2025

TERMIS-AM Conference Winner

Postdoctoral Research Fellow and Founder and CEO of NovaGyn Becca Thomson '20 Th'21 Th'25 attended the Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine International Society Americas Conference in Detroit. There she was a finalist in the Business Plan Competition and winner of the $1,000 People's Choice Award and $2,000 Judges' Award. "Winning these awards was an incredible honor and a huge validation for NovaGyn's mission of advancing surgical solutions in women's health," said Thomson. "I'm thrilled that our innovative approach to tissue engineering resonated with both experts and the community. This recognition motivates us to continue pushing the boundaries of regenerative medicine and bring meaningful solutions to patients worldwide." 

Yanqiao Li at Blueprint Showcase

Nov 13, 2025

Research Startup Showcase

Postdoc researcher Yanqiao Li Th'25, advised by Professor Jason Stauth, presented his startup, uDrive, at The Engine's Blueprint Showcase in Boston—the culmination of a program that helps researchers build "tough tech" startups. Leveraging Li's PhD research at Thayer, uDrive develops technologies for next-generation haptics and compact cooling solutions for mobile devices. Smartphones currently use basic haptics [vibrations] for notifications," Li explained. "High-definition haptics, enabled by new piezoelectric actuators, can do much more—such as allowing you to feel the texture of clothes while shopping online. The widespread adoption of this technology, however, is currently limited by a lack of high-voltage, energy-efficient electronics. Our startup is bridging this gap."