When Johns Hopkins and Salisbury take the field for NCAA Division III playoff games on Saturday, they will be backed by a ...
Systems that operate on behalf of people or corporations are the latest product from the AI boom, but these “agents” may ...
More than anything, setting lofty goals — and then reaching them — has always been the trait that defines Rochester Mayo’s ...
QuestBridge, the national nonprofit that connects low-income youth with leading colleges, has announced that 2,627 students ...
With the Islamic group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) now in control, Syria — especially its minorities — lives in paranoia. The ...
Long-term census data released Thursday shows the cost of housing in the Baltimore area and the rest of Maryland increasing ...
Law has three associate's degrees, a bachelor's degree and a master's degree — all at the age of 19. Now, she's become the ...
Beth Blauer, an expert in using data to help improve the work of governments, will lead a new effort to maximize the ...
An investigation published in The BMJ raises new concerns over the landmark clinical trial (PLATO) that was used to gain ...
Johns Hopkins University (JHU) consistently ranks as one of the top global universities, excelling in both Times Higher ...
We tie our shoes, we put on neckties, we wrestle with power cords. Yet despite deep familiarity with knots, most people cannot tell a weak knot from a strong one by looking at them, research finds.
Axons in brain cells resemble a string of pearls rather than smooth tubes, according to Johns Hopkins researchers. This ...