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.

By blending choral performance with aerospace engineering, a student-built acoustic imaging instrument helps researchers track sound with precision — a key step toward designing quieter airplanes.

Texas A&M's Jinbo Wang and an international team use SWOT satellite data to uncover powerful submesoscale eddies, reshaping our understanding of ocean-climate dynamics.

The rare earth elements mined from discarded electronics could improve the U.S. supply chain.

Texas A&M professor uses artificial intelligence to transform the future of chemistry.

The first-ever Research in AI for Science and Engineering (RAISE) Workshop, held at the Zachry Engineering Education Complex, highlighted bold initiatives already in motion.

Dr. Congrui Grace Jin and her team have unlocked a novel way for concrete to mend its own cracks, potentially preventing structural failures and saving lives.