On Friday, the Institute for the Study of Human Rights hosted “Neurorights: Human Rights Guidelines for Neurotechnology and Artificial Intelligence,” as part of their Technology and Human Rights Series. Featuring Rafael Yuste, the talk discussed the rapidly advancing technology of neurotechnology and the need to expand the explicit legal definitions of human rights.
Read More
What We Lose When Columbia’s Gates Stay Closed
November 20, 2025Columbia Engineering Introduces Artificial Intelligence Minor
November 20, 2025What We Lose When Columbia’s Gates Stay Closed
November 20, 2025Bwoglines: Pigeon Edition
November 20, 2025