At the 2025 AOTA Annual Conference, students in the Katz School鈥檚 Occupational Therapy Doctorate unveiled a powerful and timely analysis of how practitioners support people in their final stages of life.
A team of mathematics and occupational therapy students developed and tested an artificial intelligence model capable of analyzing parent-child interactions with unprecedented efficiency and precision.
Under the guidance of DMM Industry Professor Thomas Kennon, Vani Nair and Sheera Kraitberg developed a go-to-market strategy that introduces a precision instrument modernizing sternotomy to hospitals, surgeons and insurers nationwide.
At a time when students and alumni from colleges across the United States are navigating a maze of disconnected platforms to stay in touch with their peers, three students in the M.S. in Cybersecurity are building something different鈥攕omething unified.
A new study from the Katz School introduces a better way to prepare time-based data for Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) models for forecasting changes in nature, like mosquito populations.
What if a tiny ring on your finger could tell when you鈥檙e stressed, predict your heart health and alert you to dangerous changes in your body鈥攁ll in real time? That鈥檚 the bold promise behind new Katz School research.
Briana Tucci鈥檚 research project was designed to educate older adults about outdoor fall risks and provide occupational therapy practitioners with tools to support clients beyond the four walls of their homes.
Amanda Hoberman, a graduate of the Occupational Therapy Doctorate, has created an accessible online educational module designed for occupational therapists and other healthcare professionals working with individuals affected by trauma.
In a stirring demonstration of American鈥揑sraeli unity and determination, innovators, policymakers, investors, and academics gathered in Manhattan for Hack the Hate: Innovating Against Antisemitism in the Digital Age. Held on June 18, this high-impact event spotlighted cutting-edge technologies and鈥
On May 4, 2025, the Zahava and Moshael J. Straus Center for Torah and Western Thought sponsored a field trip to Plimoth Patuxet Museums for an undergraduate honors elective. The course, 鈥淧uritan New England: From Settlement to Salem,鈥 taught by Dr. Yisroel Benporat and offered under the auspices of鈥