In partnership with the National Cancer Institute, researchers from ORNL and Louisiana State University developed a long-sequenced AI transformer capable of processing millions of pathology reports to provide experts researching cancer diagnoses and man
Filter News
Area of Research
- Advanced Manufacturing (1)
- Biological Systems (3)
- Biology and Environment (27)
- Building Technologies (1)
- Clean Energy (62)
- Climate and Environmental Systems (4)
- Computational Biology (2)
- Computational Engineering (9)
- Computer Science (21)
- Data (2)
- Electricity and Smart Grid (1)
- Energy Frontier Research Centers (1)
- Functional Materials for Energy (1)
- Fusion and Fission (6)
- Fusion Energy (2)
- Geographic Information Science and Technology (3)
- Isotopes (1)
- Knowledge Discovery (1)
- Materials (63)
- Materials for Computing (6)
- Mathematics (1)
- National Security (16)
- Neutron Science (20)
- Nuclear Science and Technology (3)
- Quantum information Science (40)
- Sensors and Controls (1)
- Supercomputing (324)
- Transportation Systems (1)
- Visualization (2)
News Type
Kate Evans, director for the Computational Sciences and Engineering Division at ORNL, has been awarded the 2024 Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematicians Activity Group on Mathematics of Planet Earth Prize.
In partnership with the National Cancer Institute, researchers from the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Modeling Outcomes for Surveillance using Scalable Artificial Intelligence are building on their groundbreaking work to
Anuj J. Kapadia, who heads the Advanced Computing Methods for Health Sciences Section at ORNL, has been elected as president of the Southeastern Chapter of the American Association of Physicists in Medicine.
Since 2019, a team of NASA scientists and their partners have been using NASA’s FUN3D software on supercomputers located at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility to conduct computational fluid dynamics simulations of a human
A team that included researchers at ORNL used a new twist on an old method to detect materials at some of the smallest amounts yet recorded.
To capitalize on AI and researcher strengths, scientists developed a human-AI collaboration recommender system for improved experimentation performance.
ORNL scientists and researchers attended the annual American Geophysical Union meeting and came away inspired for the year ahead in geospatial, earth and climate science.
Pablo Moriano, a research scientist in the Computer Science and Mathematics Division at ORNL, was selected as a member of the 2024 Class of MGB-SIAM Early Career Fellows.
Researchers at the Statewide California Earthquake Center are unraveling the mysteries of earthquakes by using physics-based computational models running on high-performance computing systems at ORNL.