In the News

Note: Some media outlets require users to log-in. The Gordon Library offers the WPI community free access to a number of newspapers. Visit newspaper database for details.  

Preview News Image

WPI to research wildfires, from space

Astronauts on the International Space Station will perform experiments for a study led by James Urban, assistant professor in the Department of Fire Protection Engineering. A spacecraft carrying materials for the experiments was launched to the space station in August. Urban studies wildfires and believes the experiments in microgravity will provide insight on non-steady flame behavior and lead to better understanding of how wildfires spread on Earth. The research was featured in Are We There Yet? - The Space Exploration Podcast, Spaceflight Now, Spectrum News 1, Industry Wired, and MassLive.

 

The Bedford Citizen

At a ceremony on August 2, President Grace Wang and Middlesex Community College (MCC) President Phil Sisson signed an articulation agreement to provide a clear pathway for MCC students to transfer to WPI. "Graduates from this program will be well-prepared to contribute to the local economy, particularly in STEM fields that are vital to our region’s growth,” said Wang. “This initiative holds immense promise for both institutions and, most importantly, for the students who will benefit from it.”

Las Vegas Review-Journal

Milosh Puchovsky, professor of practice and associate head of the Department of Fire Protection Engineering, provided analysis to the Las Vegas Review-Journal for its coverage of a fatal residential fire, and laws regarding retrofitting older buildings with fire protection equipment. Puchovsky discussed the benefits of sprinklers, including the additional time they provide residents to escape a fire.

Also featured in: Fire Engineering
Spectrum News 1

Astronauts on the International Space Station will perform experiments for a study led by James Urban, assistant professor in the Department of Fire Protection Engineering. A spacecraft carrying materials for the experiments was launched to the space station on August 4. Urban studies wildfires and believes the experiments in microgravity will provide insight on non-steady flame behavior and lead to better understanding of how wildfires spread on Earth. 

Worcester Business Journal

The Massachusetts Clean Energy Center is providing funding to Mehdi Mortazavi, associate teaching professor in the Department of Mechanical & Materials Engineering. The funding will support research to develop more efficient production of green hydrogen for use as fuel in heavy-duty transportation.  

Also featured in: Global Renewable News
Bangor Daily News

The Bangor Daily News and other media outlets reported on the results from a study by students at WPI's Acadia National Park, Maine Project Center in Bar Harbor. Students, as part of WPI's interactive qualifying project requirement and the Global Projects Program, have been collecting data on e-bike usage in the national park since 2019.

Magazine of the Society of Women Engineers

Suzanne LePage, an instructor in the Department of Civil, Environmental, & Architectural Engineering juggles engineering with a side gig. Read more about her work in the classroom and her work running a farm-to-table restaurant, brewery, and bar. LePage is one of several women in engineering featured in this article in Society of Women Engineers Magazine on women in the field with professional endeavors outside of engineering.

NPR

What lessons should we learn from the global technology outage that resulted from a faulty CrowdStrike cybersecurity software update? NPR spoke with Professor and Computer Science Department Head Craig Shue to get his take. He discussed the need for speed in cybersecurity software updates and why there are pros and cons to the cybersecurity landscape's reliance on a handful of providers. 

Worcester Business Journal

‘Technology is changing so fast, and there are many cool things to learn,’ said Elke Rundensteiner, head of the data science program and professor of computer science. The Worcester Business Journal spoke with Rundensteiner and reported on WPI's new master's degree program in artificial intelligence in a story on AI in higher education in the region.

 

 

Mass Live

A team from WPI representing the startup FinSafe AI placed second in a pitch competition held during the FinTech + AI 413 Startup Launch Series. The startup seeks to provide AI-driven cybersecurity solutions for early-stage FinTech organizations.

 

 

BeautyMatter

Steve Taylor, a professor in The Business School, is quoted in a column in BeautyMatter that suggests companies with a sustainability focus must also pay attention to aesthetics to connect with customers. Taylor, who researches organizational aesthetics, discusses storytelling as an aspect of aesthetics.

 

BBC

Peter Hansen, a mountaineering expert and professor of history and director of International and Global Studies at WPI, spoke to the BBC’s The Forum podcast about the history of mountain climbing dating back to the 1300s. Hansen, author of several books on mountaineering, including “The Summits of Modern Man: Mountaineering after the Enlightenment,” gave important insight into the role climbing has played in society’s ever-changing relationship with nature. 

Boston Globe

“If you’ve got a thousand computers, that’s going to take somebody a while to do.” Craig Shue, head of WPI’s computer science department discussed the recovery work facing organizations affected by a global technology outage. Professor Shue provided analysis on the outage’s effects and on cybersecurity software for an article in The Boston Globe.  

Associated Press

Computer Science Department Head Craig Shue helps explain a global technology outage that resulted from a CrowdStrike software update. "It is an ‘all our eggs are in one basket’ situation,” he told The Associated Press.

EdTech Digest

EdTech Digest reported on federal efforts to support developers of educational technology and provide essential information regarding artificial intelligence. The article credits Neil Heffernan, the William Smith Dean's Professor of Computer Science and the director of the Learning Sciences and Technologies Program, with contributing ideas for translating Department of Education recommendations for AI in education into practical guidelines.

 

 

 

 

Boston Globe

David Ibbett, assistant teaching professor in the Department of Humanities & Arts, was featured in The Boston Globe for an article about composers who translate science into musical scores. Ibbett's "Mars Symphony" is being performed this summer at the Museum of Science in Boston

Recycling Today

Professors Michael Timko and Alex Maag in the Department of Chemical Engineering have received funding from the Massachusetts Manufacturing Innovation Initiative to support their efforts to reduce plastic waste by converting mixed plastics and films into chemicals. The funding award was reported on in this article in Recycling Today, and also in articles in Waste Today, the Worcester Business Journal, and MassLive.

Robotics & Automation News

Massachusetts Manufacturing Innovation Initiative grants will support research efforts at WPI involving the departments of chemical engineering and mechanical & materials engineering. One grant will see AM Batteries collaborate with WPI on battery material research. Another grant will allow WPI researchers to develop a process to convert plastic waste into valuable chemicals.

Also featured in: Lowell Sun
The New York Times

“When you move your IT infrastructure to the cloud, suddenly you’re in a place that is shared with a bunch of other people, and it becomes much trickier… There are many more ways in which potential attacks can be done.”  Professor Patrick Schaumont in the Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering provided analysis for The New York Times on the AT&T breach involving the data of more than 100 million phone customers. He discussed the potential risks of shared IT infrastructure in the cloud. The article also appeared in MSN.

CBS News

"These call logs reveal social and/or professional networks of people." Electrical & computer engineering professor Patrick Schaumont explains the security concerns raised by a data breach affecting millions of AT&T customers. His analysis was featured in a CBS News article that was re-published in yahoo! News and AOL.

 

Eurogamer

Eurogamer recently reviewed a new escape room called Memoirscape, which was created as part of a design of interactive experiences course. The immersive narrative experience provides an opportunity for participants to let curiosity guide them and notice the narrative unfold, rather than rush to escape.