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In the Media

New Scientist

Prof. Richard Binzel spoke at the Europlanet Science Congress (EPSC) about efforts to create a system that could help deflect deadly asteroids away from Earth, reports Alex Wilkins for New Scientist. “If we had to deal with an actual asteroid threat,” says Binzel, “we would certainly want to know these properties, like the spin or tumbling state [of an asteroid].”

GBH

Prof. Thomas Kochan speaks with GBH reporter Craig LeMoult about the recent Market Basket’s leadership dispute. “The reality is Market Basket is a community asset,” says Kochan. “People value it because it provides good service, good prices, good jobs. And the public is hungry for a company like that. And they demonstrated that in 2014 when the first episode occurred and everyone rallied around the employees who rallied their CEO.” 

The Wall Street Journal

Wall Street Journal reporter Christoph Irmscher reviews “The Shape of Wonder: How Scientists Think, Work, and Live,” a new book by Prof. Alan Lightman and Britain’s former Astronomer Royal, Martin Rees. In their new book, Lightman and Rees assert that: “The pursuit of scientific knowledge is beautiful,” Irmscher notes. “Science is important, they explain, it is fun, and, if you’re a scientist, it might just hand you the keys to the deepest mysteries of the universe.”  

Gizmodo

Gizmodo reporter Gayoung Lee writes that scientists from the sPHENIX Collaboration, including MIT physicists, announced that the sPHENIX detector passed a “standard candle” test with “flying colors, correctly catching and measuring the energy level of colliding gold ions traveling close to the speed of light.” Lee notes that: “Passing the test bodes well for the detector’s future,” explaining that the detector was designed to precisely measure products of high-speed particle collisions. “The sPHENIX detector is like a ‘giant 3D camera’ tracking the number, energy, and paths of particles generated by a single collision.” 

CNN

Prof. Dylan Hadfield-Menell speaks with CNN reporter Hadas Gold about the need for AI safeguards and increased education on large language models. “The way these systems are trained is that they are trained in order to give responses that people judge to be good,” explains Hadfield-Menell. 

Time Magazine

MIT Dean of Digital Learning Cynthia Breazeal SM ’93, ScD ’00, Profs. Regina Barzilay and Priya Donti, and a number of MIT alumni have been named to Time’s TIME 100 AI 2025 list. The list spotlights “innovators, leaders, and thinkers reshaping our world through groundbreaking advances in artificial intelligence.”


 

New York Times

Writing for The New York Times, Dennis Overbye celebrates the 10-year anniversary of LIGO’s first direct detection of gravitational waves, underscoring how LIGO has advanced our understanding of the universe’s cosmic history. The first detection was a discovery that “changed astrophysics, opening a window onto previously inaccessible realms of nature in which space could rip, bend, puff up, crumple and even vanish,” writes Overbye. The late Prof. Emeritus Rainer Weiss, who dreamed up the idea for LIGO, said of LIGO’s first detection in September 2015: “It was waving hello. It was amazing. The signal was so big, I didn’t believe it.”

The Wall Street Journal

Wall Street Journal reporter Jon Mooallem memorializes the life and work of Prof. Emeritus Rainer Weiss, from his time hacking surplus military electronics into sophisticated hi-fi receivers as a teenager to dreaming up the concept for the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO). Mooallem notes that Weiss and his LIGO colleagues’ breakthrough in achieving the first-ever detection of gravitational waves “has provided a new way of looking at the universe, of observing, through the charting of gravity waves emitted by moving objects, what was previously unobservable or unknown—a milestone that is frequently compared with Galileo’s invention of the telescope.”

Financial Times

Writing for the Financial Times, Prof. Carlo Ratti explores the need for creativity in architecture. “More than ever, architecture needs experimentation,” explains Ratti. “In the face of a burning planet, we must draw on all forms of intelligence — natural, artificial and collective — to confront the challenges ahead. We need to try new materials, experiment with different ways to harness energy and test morphologies that will better sustain what the ancient Romans called civitas: the community of citizens. We need to explore new methods, engaging in a feedback loop of trial and error that mirrors the adaptive logic of nature itself.”

Wall Street Journal

To get a better sense of the physical and cognitive experience of aging, Wall Street Journal reporter Amy Dockser Marcus donned the MIT AgeLab’s age-simulation suit, called the “Age Gain Now Empathy System” or Agnes for short, and embarked on a number of activities, including shopping at the grocery store, riding the subway, crossing a busy street, and cooking a meal. Dockser Marcus notes that research at the MIT AgeLab is focused on “finding ways to improve life for the elderly,” and noted that the Agnes suit provided a “greater insight into what it is really like to age—and what I could do to prepare.”

Newsweek

Prof. Regina Barzilay speaks with Newsweek reporter Katherine Fung about the how hospitals around the world around increasingly adopting new technologies. “Countries with a centralized healthcare system, or centralized healthcare records, can do a much better job because they have so much data and so much ability to monitor what AI tools are doing," says Barzilay. 

The Wall Street Journal

Prof. Andrew Lo speaks with Wall Street Journal reporter Cheryl Winokur Munk about how AI tools could be used to help people with financial planning. Winokur Munk writes that Lo recommends providing “just enough information to get relevant answers. And leave out highly personal details like your name, address, salary, employer or specific assets…as such details put people at risk should the AI be compromised.” Lo also advises “trying several AI platforms,” writes Winokur Munk. And “the advice should be run by a professional, trusted family or friends. Be a bit skeptical and double-check with humans.”

Boston Globe

Prof. Marzyeh Ghassemi speaks with Boston Globe reporter Hiawatha Bray about her work uncovering issues with bias and trustworthiness in medical AI systems. “I love developing AI systems,” says Ghassemi. “I’m a professor at MIT for a reason. But it’s clear to me that naive deployments of these systems, that do not recognize the baggage that human data comes with, will lead to harm.”

CNN

CNN visits the lab of Prof. Kevin Chen to learn more about his group’s work developing a bee-like robot that can flap its wings up to 400 times a second and flip and hover, and a grasshopper-inspired robot that can hop 20 centimeters into the air in terrains ranging from grass to ice. Chen and his colleagues hope the insect-inspired robots could one day help with tasks like artificial pollination or search and rescue operations. Insects have “evolved for millions of years. There’s a lot to be learned from insect motion, behavior and structure," Chen explains.

Boston Globe

Boston Globe reporter Jeffrey Kelly spotlights the MIT Student Lending Art Program, which allows MIT students to borrow original works of art from the MIT List Visual Arts Center. “No artist wants their work to be collected by a museum and to sit in storage forever and come out once every 10 years,” says Natalie Bell, MIT List’s chief curator. “That’s not why they’re doing this. So it’s a really unique collection in that way, because the priority is for people to experience the work and to live with it.”

The Week

Provost Anantha Chandrakasan speaks with Lavina Melwani of The Week about how his mother’s work ethic and energy helped inspired his career, how his formative experiences in education showed him the importance of persistence, and his goals as provost of MIT. Chandrakasan notes that he hopes to enable MIT researchers to continue making “extraordinary contributions and impact, whether it is in scholarship, educational innovation or entrepreneurship. My role is to promote excellence in academics, research and entrepreneurship, and I would like to deliver on the promise of enabling excellence.”

Community Updates

Featured Multimedia

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Artificial intelligence (AI) optimization offers benefits for mechanical engineers, including faster and more accurate designs and simulations, improved efficiency, and reduced development costs. In MIT class, AI and Machine Learning for Engineering Design, students use tools and techniques from artificial intelligence and machine learning for design, with a focus on the creation of new products and on engineering design challenges.

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MIT Museum curator Debbie Douglas is driven by a question: “Why are things the way they are today?” With some 1.5 million objects from throughout MIT’s history, today’s museum holds broad appeal for anyone who is, as Douglas says, “insanely curious.”

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The AI-enabled MIT Learn is a hub for MIT’s lifelong learning opportunities, offering more than 12,700 educational resources — including introductory and advanced courses, courseware, videos, podcasts, and more — from departments across MIT.

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