A system developed at Texas A&M uses drone imagery and artificial intelligence to rapidly assess damage after hurricanes and floods, offering life-saving insights in minutes.

Construction scientists and engineers are learning lessons in space that can be applied for better construction here on the home planet.

The first of its kind, a new adhesive for wearable medical devices could offer relief for allergy-prone skin.

New technology could lead to faster, more accurate testing to accelerate developments in healthcare and the biotechnology industry.

Three Texas A&M University students have been combing through former Chief Scientist of NASA Dr. John Charles’ collection, containing glimpses into the history of aeronautic medical research.

Researchers are testing a virtual assistant that may help astronauts solve unexpected problems during space travel.

New research provides the first evidence of the use of browser fingerprints for online tracking.

Texas A&M anthropologist Dr. Heather B. Thakar uncovers the 11,000-year history of avocado domestication at El Gigante Rockshelter, revealing how ancient Hondurans shaped the evolution of this globally significant crop.

New self-growing technology could revolutionize Martian architecture by using living biomaterials to 3D print structures — without human intervention.

Texas A&M teams with Humanate, an NVIDIA Inception company, to advance “Cassie,” which uses facial recognition for more human and empathetic interactions.