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Stanford researchers shine light on the defects responsible for messy behavior in quantum materials

To get to a future of quantum technologies Stanford researchers in collaboration with labs at Harvard University and University of Technology Sydney are investigating hexagonal boron nitride which can emit bright light at room temperature as a single photon - a quantum unit of light - at a time. Their work to understand hexagonal boron nitride's defect of emitting light in a rainbow of different hues with the goal to control its properties, will open the door to the development of quantum optical technologies.

David Kelley wins the National Academy of Engineering's Gordon Prize

Founder of Stanford's Hasso Plattner Institute of Design, or d.school, David M. Kelley has been awarded the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) 2020 prize for educational innovation. Kelley developed a curriculum for design thinking which students have used as a framework to cultivate empathy and creativity to solve human challenges in addition to technical ones.

Tech that Adapts to People: A Tug in the Right Direction

With seed grant support from the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence (HAI), Yuhang Che, Ph.D. used AI to train a robot to learn from data about people's behavior in path-crossing situations. The trained robot communicated body-language type cues and explicit messages to cross a human's path. Holding a handheld haptic device with a skin stretch mechanism, the human received communication from the robot. As more autonomous systems come online it will be important to understand how people interact with these systems.

New machine learning method from Stanford with Toyota researchers, could supercharge battery development for electric vehicles

A team led by Stanford professors Stefano Ermon and William Chueh has developed a machine learning based method that cuts battery testing times - a major barrier to developing longer lasting, faster-charging batteries for electric vehicles. The study was part of a larger collaboration with scientists from Stanford, MIT and the Toyota Research Institute with a goal of finding the best method to charge an EV battery in 10 minutes that maximizes the battery's overall lifetime.

Putting Ethics at the Heart of Innovation

Stanford's Long-Range Vision focuses attention on the intersection of ethics, society and technology with a dual goal to empower researchers to explore the societal and ethical consequences of their work and to ensure students are equipped to address the effects of technological advancement. Stanford's Ethics, Society and Technology Integrative Hub was developed to support this work by assisting students and faculty to explore the ethical dimensions of innovation.

Stanford’s Alan Sykes on the New U.S.-China Trade Agreement

This Q&A with Stanford Law Professor Alan O. Sykes discusses key aspects of the much anticipated "Phase One" trade agreement with China signed on Jan 15 by President Trump. The U.S. will reduce some of its tariffs increases imposed over the last two years in return for concessions in "phase one" but retains the bulk of the tariffs as "negotiating leverage" for the future.

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