Artificial Intelligence
Stewards of Responsible Tech
New York Tech recently hosted the Responsible Tech Careers event, where students mingled with industry professionals and learned how to advocate for responsible and ethical technology usage.
AI Minor Debuts
Starting in the spring semester of 2025, New York Tech will begin offering a minor in artificial intelligence (AI), open to all undergraduate students preparing to transition into any number of careers.
Are Messages From Robots Trustworthy?
A new study led by the School of Management’s Colleen Kirk, D.P.S., explores how consumers react when marketers use robots to write emotional messages.
Vancouver Faculty Win University-Sponsored Research Awards in New Program
The new Global Impact Research Grant (GIRG) program has been developed to keep Vancouver-based faculty connected to faculty and research projects being conducted on the university’s New York campuses.
News Byte: Re-envisioning Gaudí’s New York City Skyscraper
A futuristic installation led by the School of Architecture and Design’s Pablo Lorenzo-Eiroa, Ph.D., M.Arch II, and his students were featured in New York City’s Art in the Parks exhibition.
AI Might Kill the ‘Starchitect’—But Make Real Estate More Sustainable
Architects can help to address climate change by embracing generative artificial intelligence (AI), writes Alessandro Melis, Ph.D.
Putting Knowledge and Skill Into Action
Faculty and students from schools and colleges across the university come together to address the challenges of people living with Parkinson’s disease and autism spectrum disorder, allowing students to grow beyond their traditional career paths.
Alumni Profile: Amir Gefen
As the AI Lab Manager at the Ministry of Education in Israel, Amir Gefen (M.A. ’95) scouts for educational technologies that use artificial intelligence (AI) and matches them with schools as pilot programs, ultimately offering recommendations to the government on how to approach and what to do with AI in the classroom.
The Scent of Discovery
New research from the College of Osteopathic Medicine (NYITCOM) could help explain how the sense of smell is impacted in individuals with autism.