As hurricane season continues to affect communities, researchers at Texas A&M are using AI to assess the damage.

A professor at Texas A&M’s Mays Business School says critical thinking and people skills will become increasingly valuable as artificial intelligence enters the workforce.

Dr. Candice Chu has created a “virtual study partner” to help veterinary students prepare for exams.

Texas A&M researchers are using AI to improve the management of disasters like hurricanes before, during and after the events.

Researchers are developing a framework to merge AI and human intelligence in hopes of improving process safety systems.

Researchers are exploring the use of generative AI to help electrical and power engineers with daily tasks.

Members include Amazon, Apple, Adobe, Intel, Google, Meta, Microsoft and OpenAI (creator of ChatGPT), plus Johns Hopkins, MIT and Stanford.

The institute will be based on the Bryan-College Station campus with an extension at the new Texas A&M-Fort Worth campus.

Texas A&M will invest up to $4.75 million a year to develop research proposals aimed at attracting additional funding.

Law and communication professor Peter Yu provides context on the rising controversies involving intellectual property and AI.