
Your Homework Assignment: Improve Refugees’ Lives
Students get creative with solutions as migrants flee regions in turmoil around the world.
Students get creative with solutions as migrants flee regions in turmoil around the world.
Keck School of Medicine of USC study finds that online and in-person care were equally effective at improving symptoms.
USC’s maker culture is thriving as working spaces for creators pop up across campus.
The next wave of smartphone and car batteries could pack big power in a small size.
Using knowledge to inspire new thought and creativity is USC’s loftiest aspiration.
USC researchers hone artificial intelligence to thwart international criminals, instantly translate thousands of languages and more.
Awards go to projects that could help infants, the deaf and environmentalists.
Acting students prep for careers in virtual reality, video games and motion capture—with a firm grounding in classical training.
The downtown L.A. facility will provide students with firsthand experience in advanced technologies.
One day you may be able to share health information on your smartphone.
A city without waste? In this electronic game, it’s ecology and urban planning for the win.
The future of neuromedicine grows closer at the USC Neurorestoration Center, where patients are already seeing the benefits.
USC students create the digital future in a new interactive building.
The USC Shoah Foundation painstakingly guards the last remaining voices of the survivors and witnesses of the Holocaust.
They tackle problems from different directions, but their work shows the promise of convergent bioscience.
Convergence melds life science, physical sciences and engineering to find answers to perplexing problems in health.
At USC, philanthropist Gary Michelson just put scientists’ and engineers’ efforts into overdrive.
Jimmy Iovine and Andre Young (Dr. Dre) invest $70 million to prepare USC students who’ll shape the future.
The ninth annual event awards startups that create viable solutions to global problems.
Twenty senior government officials visited the USC Price School of Public Policy for two weeks.