- November 22, 2024
George Mason University has been awarded funding from the National Institutes of Health through its Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning Consortium to Advance Health Equity and Researcher Diversity (AIM-AHEAD) program.
- August 20, 2024
Antidepressants not working well? Let AI prescribe medication
- August 14, 2024
Antidepressant not working? AI may do a better job than your doctor in matching you with the best medicine
- July 15, 2024
NIH grant to fund depression chatbot for Black patients
- May 30, 2024
George Mason researchers harness the power of artificial intelligence to match patients with the most effective antidepressant for their unique needs.
- July 8, 2024
Professor Farrokh Alemi receives NIH grant to pilot first-of-its-kind, evidence-based artificial intelligence tool to address the medication needs of Black and African American people with depression. This is part of the college’s Innovate for Good story series.
- March 5, 2024
George Mason University today announced an anonymous $4.85 million gift to advance groundbreaking research on bruise and injury detection for individuals who experience interpersonal violence. The funding will help develop new tools in imaging technology using a light source that is five times better than white light for identifying and visualizing bruising across all skin tones for use by forensic nurses, social service providers, and law enforcement.