Last year, we asked newly admitted freshmen why they selected UCLA Samueli. A year later, after their fall and winter quarters, we followed up on what they thought of their first year as Bruin engineers.
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#EngineeringWellness
After being impacted by suicide in his senior year of high school, Sahen Rai, a first-year computer science student, is using his newly learned skills to put numbers to feelings.
UCLA Samueli receives $5 million gift for Women in Engineering program
The UCLA Samueli School of Engineering has received a gift of $5 million from alumna Stacey Nicholas to create a permanent funding source for a program to support women in engineering.
Adhesive gel helps the eye heal itself
The new material could reduce the need for surgery to repair injuries to the cornea, including those that today would require corneal transplantation.
Emaminejad received NSF CAREER Award to advance personalized medicine
Precision monitoring technology, based on sweat, could lead to “point-of-person” healthcare.
Clean Water for All
UCLA engineers developed the first reverse osmosis membrane, an important technology to clean water worldwide. That research legacy continues at the school.
UCLA Samueli celebrates engineering accomplishments at 2019 Awards Dinner
The annual event celebrates the outstanding achievements of the UCLA Samueli community.
Team receive $5.9 million grant to design energy efficient computing systems
Revolutionary technology seeks to break the “memory bottleneck,” greatly improving computer processing speeds
For faster and cheaper diagnosis, UCLA engineers are using deep learning to digitally stain tissue
To help identify diseases, pathologists typically manually apply colored dyes, or stains, to label tissue samples.
Bazinga!: ‘The Big Bang Theory’ to support twice as many UCLA students
25 undergraduates who received the scholarship visited the cast and crew as the show wraps its final season
Over the airwaves: An icon and a professor share the same frequency
UCLA electrical engineering professor Danijela Cabric shares an interest with iconic Hollywood glamour queen Hedy Lamarr: wireless communications.
CS professor looks at how AI can use causal reasoning to make a big leap
Judea Pearl, UCLA Chancellor’s Professor of Computer Science, has authored a think piece on the future of machine learning in Communications of the ACM.











