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A collection of press releases, audio content and media clips featuring INFORMS members and their research.

AI Traffic Enforcement Minimizes Crashes Without Shifting Risk, Study Finds
News Release

BALTIMORE, MD, May 20, 2025 – As cities worldwide seek effective strategies to address rising traffic fatalities, a new study published in the INFORMS journal Management Science reveals AI-powered traffic cameras offer a breakthrough solution – not only catching violations, but meaningfully improving overall road safety. 

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Why Congress May Push Back on State AI Regulations
Media Coverage

House Republicans proposed a 10-year pause on state rules for artificial intelligence. What that could mean for consumer protections.

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Has flying become more dangerous? We speak to a Professor of statistics and a Director of aerospace engineering
Media Coverage

From the Jeju Airline tragedy to the Washington DC plane and helicopter collision, it makes you wonder whether flight safety standards have dropped.

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Resoundingly Human Podcast

An audio journey of how data and analytics save lives, save money and solve problems.

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Why Holding Second Doses of COVID-19 Vaccines in Reserve is the Wrong Strategy

Why Holding Second Doses of COVID-19 Vaccines in Reserve is the Wrong Strategy

USA Today, January 12, 2021

As of Monday about 9 million Americans, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, have received the first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, which is far below the goal of vaccinating 20 million people by the end of 2020. The slow vaccine rollout is occurring at the same time the United States is enduring record levels of infections and deaths. To accelerate vaccinations, some have proposed to delay the timing of the second dose. Critics of this approach argue that it lacks clinical evidence and may weaken the public’s confidence in vaccine effectiveness.

COVID-19 Vaccines, New Infections Are Pushing SC Toward Herd Immunity  by Fall, Experts Say

COVID-19 Vaccines, New Infections Are Pushing SC Toward Herd Immunity by Fall, Experts Say

The Post and Courier, January 12, 2021

One way or another, millions more South Carolinians need to acquire immunity from the coronavirus before the disease is at bay. The goal is herd immunity, and it is a moving target. Jane Kelly, assistant state epidemiologist with the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control, said last week that community spread of the disease should stop once 70 percent of the population has acquired immunity. That’s herd immunity. But, she said, public health experts must set the bar higher — up to 85 percent — in places where infections are rampant.

Vaccine Roll-Out a Long Haul for Alamance County

Vaccine Roll-Out a Long Haul for Alamance County

The Times News, January 12, 2021

“It’s a marathon not a sprint,” said Alamance County Health Director Tony Lo Giudice talking about the COVID-19 vaccine rollout. Lo Giudice was candid about the obstacles the Health Department faces in getting close to 170,000 Alamance County residents inoculated against the coronavirus – inoculating the public from unrealistic expectations. Right now the biggest one is the meager 975 doses per week the state is allocating to Alamance County. “There is still a trickle of vaccine,” said Julie Swann, head of the Industrial Systems Engineering Department at N.C. State and an expert in how health systems operate, “and high expectations.”

Last Mile Limits U.S. Vaccine Rollout: Media

Last Mile Limits U.S. Vaccine Rollout: Media

Ecns.cn, January 12, 2021

The sluggish rollout of COVID-19 vaccines across the United States highlights the challenges of a decentralized distribution plan that relies on states and localities to handle the complicated last-mile logistics of getting shots into people's arms, reported The Wall Street Journal on Monday. More than 22 million doses had been distributed to states and other jurisdictions as of Friday, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), while 6.7 million people had received their first shot by that point. The figures were short of the U.S. goal of 20 million vaccinations by the end of 2020, and communities and states were still reporting bottlenecks this month as they managed their inoculation programs, said the Journal.

COVID-19 Vaccine Supply Chain Can Be Fixed

COVID-19 Vaccine Supply Chain Can Be Fixed

The Hill, January 11, 2021

The output from Operation Warp Speed is struggling to get its footing. The billions of dollars invested focused primarily on developing a safe and effective vaccine as quickly as possible. Equally needed was how to effectively traverse all the links in the supply chain, particularly the last mile, to transform those vaccines into vaccinations. As a result, millions of doses of vaccines sit on shelves while willing recipients anxiously await their turn to be immunized. What went wrong and what can be done today to make this right?  

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