There is no known cure for schizophrenia, but Dartmouth’s Dror Ben-Zeev and his team are working on a mobile system that can detect early warning signs of impending episodes and trigger time-sensitive interventions to help prevent relapses into psychosis.
News
October 08, 2013
Professor of Computer Science Sean Smith is assuming the leadership of Dartmouth’s Institute for Security, Technology, and Society (ISTS). The institute is dedicated to pursuing research and education to advance information security and privacy throughout society.
August 28, 2013
“Algorithms are at the core of all things digital,” says Cormen, a professor and chair of Dartmouth’s Department of Computer Science. “They run on your laptop, your smartphone, your GPS device, and in systems imbedded in your car, your microwave oven—everywhere.”
August 26, 2013
“Now with these mobile technologies, people can use these computing devices pretty much anywhere, so that means that we are collecting information from more parts of your life, from more places in your life than you might have been comfortable having collected."
August 20, 2013
New software developed by Dartmouth’s Hany Farid and his colleagues can determine whether a photo is fake—or has been altered—by analyzing shadows that cannot be seen by the naked eye, reports The New York Times.
August 15, 2013
Dartmouth has been awarded a $10-million, five-year grant from the Secure and Trustworthy Cyberspace program of the National Science Foundation (NSF) to support research into ways of safeguarding the confidentiality of personal health and medical information as these records make the transition from paper files to electronic systems.
June 12, 2013
“I would describe myself as being in the field of music-information retrieval,” says doctoral student Andy Sarroff. “Usually, I’m working with digital audio—looking at the zeros and ones in digital audio and mapping the perception to the signal.”...
April 02, 2013
MSN News turns to Dartmouth’s Hany Farid to confirm whether or not a recent photo released by the North Korean government is fake.
December 21, 2012
Dartmouth's Smartphone Sensing Group has developed a free application for Android phones called WalkSafe. It uses the Android’s camera to detect oncoming cars and alert the phone’s user.
September 25, 2012
Joseph Blumberg “CarSafe” is a driver safety app that detects dangerous driving behavior using dual-cameras on smartphones. This is the...