Displaying 25-36 of 41 Results

Embry-Riddle student veteran Sierra Juliano interned this summer for the National Transportation Safety Board. She is pictured with the Honorable Jennifer Homendy, NTSB chair. (Photo: Embry-Riddle/Sierra Juliano)
Career-Ready: Four Eagles Land Prestigious NTSB Internships
Undergraduate student researchers who took part in this year’s Interdisciplinary Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) program reflect Embry‑Riddle’s bigger-picture goal to widen and enhance the U.S. STEM pipeline. (Photo: Embry‑Riddle/Ginger Pinholster)
NSF-Funded Program at Embry‑Riddle Promotes Undergraduate Research Nationwide
Aerospace Engineering graduate student Joseph Anderson has been selected to NASA’s Florida Space Grant Consortium Masters Fellowship Program. (Photo: Joseph Anderson)
Eagle Selected as NASA Fellow, Aims to Advance Augmented Reality Tech
A new Garmin Scholarship, announced this week at EAA AirVenture Oshkosh, in Wisconsin, will benefit 13 Embry‑Riddle students. (Photo: Embry‑Riddle)
GPS Pioneer Fuels Student Dreams with New Garmin Scholarships at Embry‑Riddle
Dr. Amber Paul (right) works with Carol Mitchell, a student researcher in Paul's Omics Lab for Health and Human Performance who was a co-author on research published in a Nature compendium of space biology papers (Photo: Embry‑Riddle/Bernard Wilchusky)
Embry‑Riddle Space Biology Research Featured in Landmark Publication by Nature
Students work year-round in Embry‑Riddle’s Meteorology Laboratory, learning how to track storms and present news and weather updates to the public. (Photo: Daryl Labello/Embry‑Riddle)
Riding the Storm: How Embry‑Riddle is Preparing for an Active Storm Season
Giulia Stewart, a senior in Aerospace Physiology, has conducted research on thin films at Embry‑Riddle for the past three years. (Photo: Foram Madiyar)
Eagle to Present Research on Thin Films on National Stage This Summer
Embry‑Riddle researchers recently published findings analyzing how more than 700 participants responded to photographs of potential aviation job applicants in the peer-reviewed journal “Technology in Society.”
New Embry‑Riddle Study Explores Gender and Ethnic Biases in Aviation
Embry‑Riddle student Kaitlyn Nielsen presented her research at the Florida Undergraduate Research Association’s Posters at the Capitol 2024 event. (Photo: Embry‑Riddle/Dr. Ronnie Mack)
Eagles Present Research at Florida Capitol 2024 Event
Jose Canales, a graduate Human Factors student at Embry‑Riddle’s Worldwide Campus, tests a pressurized suit used by U-2 pilots during his aerospace and operational physiologist internship with the U.S. Air Force 9th Reconnaissance Wing. (Photo: Embry‑Riddle/Jose Canales)
Worldwide Graduate Student Rises Above Challenges to Find New Career in Human Factors
Airplane and drone fly in close proximity.
Study Offers Objective Insights to Near-Miss Collisions Between Drones, Airplanes
Researchers have developed a new way to accurately count and objectively analyze close encounters between drones and airplanes — without depending solely on pilot sightings.
Two men look at computer monitor.
Research on Driving Behavior Lands Embry-Riddle Professor NSF CAREER Award
Research led by Embry‑Riddle Aeronautical University’s Dr. Subhradeep Roy, which will use virtual reality (VR) technology while collecting data to better understand, quantify and model automobile driving behavior, has received a prestigious, five-year National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER award of $557,000.