David Silbey, a Cornell University professor of history specializing in military history, defense policy, and battlefield analysis, says that the drills serve three military purposes.
OpenAI is planning to introduce its latest open-weight language model in the coming months, marking the first release of its kind since the GPT-2 model.
Competition looks a little different now from when she played on the clay of Roland Garros and the grass of Wimbledon, but after 38 years of playing tennis, Anda Perianu can still win.
Students who want an immersive on-campus experience with American Sign Language can now sign up to live in the Language House for the 2025-26 academic year.
In his new book, “Humanities in the Time of AI,” professor Laurent Dubreuil argues that the arrival of AI may present an opportunity to “re-create scholarship.”
Researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine developed a more effective model for predicting how patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer will respond to chemotherapy.
Mabel Berezin, professor of sociology at Cornell University and an expert on international populism, says Le Pen’s conviction is going to push French politics into even more tumult.
Engineering professors Ilana Brito, Iwijn De Vlaminck and Krystyn Van Vliet were inducted into the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering College of Fellows Class of 2025 for contributions to engineering and medicine research.
Cornell scientists launched aluminum particles, each about 20 micrometers in diameter, onto an aluminum surface at speeds of up to 1,337 meters per second – well beyond the speed of sound – and used high-speed cameras to record the impacts.
After a long ocean voyage, the first major component of the Fred Young Submillimeter Telescope has arrived at its final home: the Cerro Chajnantor mountaintop, more than 18,000 feet above sea level.