High-speed sensors have revealed that pianists’ fingertips can shape sound color through precise movements. This long-sought proof turns artistic intuition into measurable science.
Californian John Martinis won a Nobel Prize for physics work he did decades ago. Today, he's on a quest to create the fastest ...
The interdisciplinary field of cyberpsychology has made a significant impact on key areas of computing, including ...
A framework for building tighter security into 5G wireless communications has been created by a Ph.D. student working with ...
From large technology corporations to startups, from computer science students to indie developers, using git services is as ...
John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis demonstrated quantum tunneling in an electrical circuit, with ...
UC Berkeley emeritus professor John Clarke, UC Santa Barbara professor Michel H. Devoret and UC Santa Barbara professor John ...
In the 1980s, John Clarke, Michel Devoret and John Martinis demonstrated quantum effects in an electric circuit, an advance that underlies today’s quantum computers.
The reasons range widely, experts say, from women facing the lingering, ages-old stereotype that boys are better at math and ...
A math theory powering computer image compression, an "invisibility cloak" or the science behind the James Webb Space ...
Alan Turing and John von Neumann saw it early: the logic of life and the logic of code may be one and the same.
Facemash, a website allowing users to rank the attractiveness of Harvard students, briefly returned to campus on Sunday, ...