RNA viruses meet their match with new plays from the MU laboratory.
Innovations in Science & Technology
This Missourian special section explores the latest innovations in science and technology by MU researchers and others. Read more here or pick up a copy of the print edition at an MU Extension office.
Through the university’s Autonomous Systems Lab, collars and tennis balls are replaced by complex software to train Spot.
In the next five to 10 years, 3D printing will be enhancing its technology in the fields of medical and surgical procedures.
Solving complex problems requires piecing together bits of insight from different experts and studies.
MU and other researchers are seeing whether it's possible to detect cancer in the bloodstream among other types of cells.
Dramatic advances in digital technology are taking many steps out of the fashion design real world and into a 3D one.
As James Owen of the advocacy group Renew Missouri says, reliable batteries “are absolutely a make-or-break thing for us.”
At a time when trust in journalism is declining, it is imperative that newsrooms are transparent about their use of AI.
For the past 10 years, two MU engineers have been working to speed up the process of semiconductor manufacturing.
Athletes can wear sensors, watches, rings and patches to convey in-the-moment data and information about performance.
Can VR help alleviate insomnia without the use of drugs? A local company thinks so.
In partnership with MU, a start-up pharmaceutical company is pioneering a promising treatment for cachexia.
The approach includes transplanting pancreas cells from a donor that produces insulin.
Observing the abundance of elements, scientists can determine where the heavy elements are made, how much and which source.