In the news | The Verge
Microsoft has created a watch that the company says can help people with Parkinson's disease write more clearly. The Emma Watch sends vibrations to the brain that help control hand tremors.
Awards | Dynamic Spectrum Alliance
The Award for Internet of Things (IoT) Innovation was presented to Ranveer Chandra, Principal Researcher at Microsoft for his work helping small farms increase their production and move from sustenance to production using the cloud and dynamic spectrum access.
At CNCC2016, the annual conference of China Computer Federation (CCF) in Taiyuan, the “Best Solution Award of 2016” was awarded to Microsoft Academic. We’re honored that the organizing committee and more than 5,000 attendees voted this solution the best of…
By Miran Lee, Senior Principal Research Program Manager, Microsoft Research Asia Four researchers. Two institutions. One successful computer vision breakthrough. That’s the power of collaboration. The project, “Unified Depth Prediction and Intrinsic Image Decomposition from a Single Image via Joint…
Microsoft Research Montreal lab's vision is to create machines that can comprehend, reason and communicate with humans. We see a future where humans interact with machines just as they would with another human. We could ask a question in natural…
In the news | Microsoft Transform
Haiyan Zhang, a Microsoft researcher, to spend months studying Parkinson's disease while building and testing prototypes that could, she hoped, temporarily short-circuit the hand tremors, allowing Lawton to write her own name again.
In the news | Beta News
Today at Build 2017, Microsoft unveiled many cool new technologies, one particular announcement touched the hearts of many. Called 'Emma,' it is a wrist wearable that can help people suffering with Parkinson's disease.
In the news | USA Today
The watch works through a combination of sensors and AI (artificial intelligence) techniques to potentially detect and monitor symptoms like tremors, stiffness and instability, among others, according to Microsoft.
In the news | TechRadar
No one single technology exists in a vacuum. Microsoft’s Kinect may have suffered an ignoble slide into obscurity following its troubled pairing with the Xbox One. But its underlying principles, technology and the research that went into developing it now…