- October 8, 2024
Bioengineering senior design team wins national award.
- May 9, 2024
A 2020 graduate of George Mason’s Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Iranian-born Farnoud Farahmand works for tech giant Apple in Silicon Valley doing a job he hadn’t thought about as an undergrad or even a grad student.
- September 28, 2023
Computer science sophomore Jax Dumfee chose Mason because of its Competitive Cyber team. Students from all majors at all levels can participate in the organization and gain practical skills for a future working in the tech sector.
- August 31, 2023
The College of Engineering and Computing continues its trajectory of growth hitting a record number of nearly 12,000 students.
- August 23, 2023
The National Science Foundation's Navigating the New Arctic researchers traveled to a remote location to attend the Permafrost and Infrastructure Symposium in Utqiaġvik, Alaska, some 320 miles north of the Arctic Circle.
- May 11, 2023
College of Engineering and Computing students shared inspiring research ideas at the annual Celebration of Undergraduate Research.
- April 12, 2023
The College of Engineering and Computing welcomes Robert Simmons to its May 19 Degree Celebration.
- July 22, 2022
The college remembers the legacy of friend and benefactor of the college, Sid Dewberry.
- May 6, 2022
In 2022, researchers funded by the Commonwealth Cyber Initiative’s (CCI) Northern Virginia Node (NoVa Node) will be exploring the impact of human behavior on cybersecurity systems. Divided into six teams, Two of the teams were led by IST faculty.
- March 17, 2022
The American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering (AIMBE) has announced the election of Giorgio Ascoli, University Professor, in the Department of Bioengineering at George Mason University to its College of Fellows. Ascoli was nominated, reviewed, and elected by peers and members of the AIMBE College of Fellows for outstanding contributions in the development of open-access resources for data science in the investigation of learning, memory, and neurodegeneration.