Argonne National Laboratory is tackling the world’s most challenging problems faster than ever before by using robotics, artificial intelligence and machine learning to automate science.
Antibody therapies have a variety of uses, but we need to know which therapies work and which ones don’t. Recent research has discovered a means to determine how effective certain antibodies can be in medical scenarios.
Argonne National Laboratory has developed computer models to predict how disease can spread. With funding from the U.S. Department of Energy, it will work with Sandia National Laboratories algorithms to make them better.
Argonne’s Rapid Prototyping Laboratory is helping undergraduate and graduate students prepare for future science careers. Their efforts are paving the way for automating lab work with robotics and AI in autonomous discovery.
Argonne’s collaboration with the Discovery Partners Institute helps public health officials track COVID variants and infectious diseases across Illinois. The system was honored among the most innovative new products or services brought to market in 2022.
Autonomous discovery will change science and scientific careers. Argonne hopes to train the next generation of STEM experts in robotics, artificial intelligence and machine learning during a 2023 summer internship program to support autonomous discovery.
New research shows cells gather more data than once believed inside the thalamus, a relay station of sensory and motor abilities in the brain. That could change how medicine treats schizophrenia, epilepsy and other brain disorders.
Stepping into their superhero gear, Argonne scientists are using science and the world’s best technology to combat some of Earth’s toughest foes, from pollution to climate change.
Scientists make pivotal discovery of method for wireless modulation of neurons with X-rays that could improve the lives of patients with brain disorders. The X-ray source only requires a machine like that found in a dentist’s office.