Mississippi State University has been invited for the fifth consecutive time to participate in the nation’s premier automotive engineering competition.
A Starkville-based company launched from a Mississippi State research program is receiving $20,000 for testing of a product to improve safety for football players.
Researchers at the Center for Advanced Vehicular Systems are putting Mississippi State at the forefront of the conversation around self-driving vehicles.
In 2001, Mississippi officials saw a chance to secure the state’s first automotive manufacturing plant—a major investment from Nissan that would create billions of dollars in economic impact. They turned to the state’s leading research university to help make it a reality.
Haley Doude encourages all girls and women interested in pursuing science and technology careers “first, to believe in yourself, and second, to know that we are all rooting for you to succeed.”
Mississippi State and the university’s Center for Advanced Vehicular Systems recently hosted an international gathering to discuss issues related to autonomous driving and advanced driving-assist technologies.
A Mississippi State chemical engineering expert is receiving a prestigious CAREER award from the National Science Foundation.
Mississippi State is once again pushing the limits of automotive engineering through the development of a self-driving, all-electric sport utility vehicle.
Mississippi State University is one of the first universities in the country to provide all students with access to the latest virtual and augmented reality equipment, thanks to a partnership between MSU Libraries and the university’s Center for Advanced Vehicular Systems.
As a research engineer in the Human Factors Research Group, John McGinley’s work is never boring. Located within the Center for Advanced Vehicular Systems at Mississippi State, his job focuses on human elements, and how these affect the design of cars and other vehicles.