AI system delivers fast, accurate
patient data
Mining data from the human mouth
When you can’t trust your own eyes and ears to detect deepfakes, who can you trust? Perhaps, a machine. University of Florida researcher Damon Woodard is using artificial intelligence methods to develop algorithms that can detect deepfakes — images, text, video and audio that purports to be real but isn’t. These algorithms, Woodard says, are better at detecting deepfakes than humans.
Educating future generations
UF bridge engineers take advantage of breakthroughs in sensors and materials
An updated training reactor offers new opportunities in nuclear engineering
UF/IFAS researchers may have found a key to converting algae to fuel
A team of UF researchers says it has developed a way to stop ransomware dead in its tracks
Not every microscope is created equal. The trick is finding the right one, and sometimes that means starting from scratch. ...
A visibly nervous man is stopped at a border crossing in eastern Europe. Authorities find a glass tube filled with...
As scientific voids go, it would be hard just now to find a more pressing question: How do the aerosols...
UF astronomy Professor Rafael Guzmán has spent his life looking up at the stars, but it took just one question...











