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In the Media

CNBC

Prof. Danielle Wood speaks with CNBC reporter Laya Neelakandan about NASA’s Artemis III, the United States’ first venture back to the moon in over 50 years, which will carry the first female and first Black astronaut to the Moon. “NASA’s been thinking through this whole process, two decades’ worth, of what we’re going to do is prepare the government to focus on these harder, next-generation missions and be able to do things that are not already demonstrated,” says Wood. 

The Boston Globe

In an opinion piece for The Boston Globe, MIT Prof. Carlo Ratti and University of Toronto Prof. Richard Florida explore the “paradox of overtourism.” Ratti and Florida note that: “Tourism accelerates global convergence — the same luxury retailers, hotel chains, and Instagram‑ready design cues that push cities to conform to international expectations. At times, it can even undermine more authentic local businesses, which cannot compete against much larger global competitors. Yet local distinctiveness does not vanish under global pressure; it adapts. The visual signatures that make one place different from another persist beneath the surface layer of brands. That is where efforts to manage tourism’s cultural impact should concentrate.” 

USA Today

Research Scientist Judah Cohen speaks with USA Today reporter Doyle Rice about how changes in the polar vortex will impact March weather across the United States. “I would expect a milder period in the eastern US until close to the spring equinox," says Cohen. "Then I think eventually colder weather arrives to the eastern U.S. related to the polar vortex split in late March or early April that could hang around for a while."

Associated Press

Associated Press reporter Kyle Hightower spotlights the 20th MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference which will take place in early March. “At a time when all the world’s digital data is believed to double every two years, it’s made the annual assemblage even more essential in a sports world driven by numbers,” explains Hightower. 

The Boston Globe

Boston Globe reporter Jon Chesto spotlights the MIT Martin Trust Center for MIT Entrepreneurship’s delta v startup accelerator program, which is designed to help early-stage startups find success in the Boston area. With financial support from Klaviyo co-founders Ed Hallen MBA ’12, and Andrew Bialecki, the program will “help support more customizing, to better tailor the program for each entrepreneur, as well as a broadening of its professional network, to support mentorship from industry veterans for the participating startups,” writes Chesto. 

New York Times

A paper by Prof. Christopher Knittel and his colleagues explores the impact of climate change on inflation, reports Lydia DePillis for The New York Times. “We’re likely at this inflection point where costs are going to start growing more rapidly,” says Knittel. “The observed costs have been fairly linear so far. Going forward, that’s going to start increasing at an increasing rate.”

TechCrunch

Guide Labs, co-founded by Julius Adebayo SM ’15, SM ’16, PhD ’22, has debuted a large language model designed to make “its actions easily interpretable,” reports Tim Fernholz for Tech Crunch. “Every token produced by the model can be traced back to its origins in the LLM’s training data,” explains Fernholz. 

The Boston Globe

Boston Globe reporter Annie Sarlin spotlights the MIT Museum’s digital collection “dedicated to the life and work of Harold ‘Doc’ Edgerton.” The collection is available for viewing online and “includes digitized copies of his notebooks, historical photographs, and informational text and videos about his industry-shaping role in the evolution of high-speed, flash photography,” explains Sarlin. 

Aesthetica Magazine

Aesthetica Magazine reporter Eleanor Sutherland spotlights “Freezing Time,” a new exhibit at the MIT Museum featuring the work of Harold “Doc” Edgerton, a “pioneer of high-speed imaging who made it possible to see what the human eye cannot.” This is “the first exhibition to really interrogate Edgerton’s experimental journey in developing his innovative image-making processes,” says Michael John Gorman, director of the MIT Museum. 

Newsweek

Researchers at MIT have used “recycled plastic to 3D-print construction-grade beams, trusses, and other structural elements,” reports Soo Kim for Newsweek. The new design method “could offer a lighter, modular, and more-sustainable alternatives to wood-based framing,” explains Kim.  

Gizmodo

Researchers at MIT have developed a new 3D printing platform that can “produce a fully functioning linear motor in about three hours,” reports Justin Caffier for Gizmodo. The research team “explained how by retrofitting a printer with enough extruders to handle the various materials needed to make a working motor, they decimated the usual production time for such a device and brought the material costs down to around $0.50,” writes Caffier.  

Fortune

Prof. Daron Acemoglu speaks with Fortune reporter Jake Angelo about his work studying the “origins of economic and political decay,” and the need for the U.S. to crack down “on economic inequality and tempering with job destruction.” “If we go down this path of destroying jobs [and] creating more inequality, U.S. democracy is not going to survive,” says Acemoglu.  

Community Updates

Featured Multimedia

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Joseph Paradiso of the MIT Media Lab advances wearable sensing technologies that translate human motion into data and sound, shaping research across dance, medicine, exploration, and human-technology interaction. His work has influenced fields from dance and sports medicine to environmental research and exploration.

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MIT Lincoln Laboratory’s Communication Networks and Analysis Group develops resilient communication technologies that enable secure, seamless data sharing across space, air, and surface platforms—even in contested or congested environments.

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MIT President Sally Kornbluth speaks with Associate Professor Emil Verner who examines how finance and the broader economy interact. In this episode they talk about why financial crises happen, how they ripple through economies and politics, and what they mean for individual financial stability.

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In 16.85 Autonomy Capstone (Design and Testing of Autonomous Vehicles), AeroAstro students build software that allows autonomous flight vehicles to navigate unknown environments. Students develop software and hardware for a quad-rotor drone, navigating a challenging obstacle course. The course emphasizes systems-level thinking and real-world applications.

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At MIT, our mission is to advance knowledge; to educate students in science, engineering, technology, humanities and social sciences; and to tackle the most pressing problems facing the world today. We are a community of hands-on problem-solvers in love with fundamental science and eager to make the world a better place.

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Justin Kay's research focuses on making computer vision and machine learning systems more deployable and informative for science and decision-making, particularly for environmental and climate applications. Here he talks about AI and environmental conservation and answers some specific questions about his work.

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