Home Prototypes WVU health care AI researcher wins prestigious NSF CAREER award Prototypes WVU health care AI researcher wins prestigious NSF CAREER award By styloux - June 15, 2026 1 0 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp West Virginia University researcher Avishek Choudhury, who studies health care providers’ trust in artificial intelligence, has been named a Faculty Early Career Development award winner by the National Science Foundation. RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR Prototypes Report: Seattle using AI to route certain 911 calls — without caller knowledge or public review Prototypes Strategic change management in the age of generative AI Prototypes Artificial Intelligence (AI) Is Moving Beyond Data Centers. 1 Semiconductor Stock to Buy Hand Over Fist Before It Skyrockets Thanks to a Massive Opportunity... Prototypes Dozens walk out as Google boss Pichai addresses Stanford graduates Prototypes New York’s IT office partners with AWS for cloud and AI services, strategy saving taxpayers $58M Prototypes As AI agents become employees, NewCore emerges with $66M to give them identities LEAVE A REPLY Cancel reply Please enter your comment! Please enter your name here You have entered an incorrect email address! Please enter your email address here Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. - Advertisement -APLICATIONS Prototypes AI PowerPoint-killer Gamma hits $2.1B valuation, $100M ARR, founder says styloux - November 10, 2025 0 Gamma is growing quickly, and profitably, its co-founder CEO Grant Lee says. Adobe’s conversational AI agent is a mediocre design intern May 29, 2026 Why connected intelligence is the future of enterprise AI February 2, 2026 Homeland Security reportedly sent hundreds of subpoenas seeking to unmask anti-ICE... February 14, 2026 HOT NEWS News Flood watch issued for SLO County. How to prepare for ‘widespread’... News Police share photo of Elyria jewelry store robber Prototypes Redmagic’s liquid-cooled gaming phone arrives with overclocked Snapdragon chip News Katie Young: Glastonbury’s re-styling guru