Lancaster University is to receive £1.7m in funding to support the next generation of researchers.
Business leaders are invited to discover how new materials are changing the world and providing scientific and commercial opportunities.
Future smart watches could go hands-free thanks to eye-tracking technology that is literally revolutionary.
Software developed at Lancaster shows that many popular new words have passed through social media sites long before going mainstream.
New research will ensure that the UK is a global leader in the privacy, ethics, trust, reliability, acceptability, and security (PETRAS) of the 'Internet of Things' (IoT). And with this strong foundation the UK will become the world’s best place to develop and deploy new internet technologies.
Physical attacks on devices connected to the Internet can be detected by analysing WiFi signals, computer scientists have discovered.
A Lancaster University professor is at the forefront of promising technology techniques to speed up the development of fifth generation (5G) wireless communications.
The School of Computing and Communications has now formulated a plan for teaching and assessment missed as a result of the severe disruption caused by Storm Desmond. Students should please check their emails to find full details of the plan. Academic staff will be updating Moodle pages with further details.
Lancaster University has been experiencing severe disruption after Storm Desmond caused widespread flooding and power cuts in the Lancaster area last weekend.
Professor Plamen P. Angelov from Lancaster University's School of Computing and Communications (SCC) has been named an IEEE Fellow, effective 1 January 2016, for contributions to neuro-fuzzy and autonomous learning systems.