Teaching robots how to move objects
PhD candidate and Amazon Robotics Challenge winner Maria Bauza helps to improve how robots interact with the world.
PhD candidate and Amazon Robotics Challenge winner Maria Bauza helps to improve how robots interact with the world.
A new daughter helped Alejandra Falla PhD ’18 gain perspective on life — and her tiny MIT regalia stole the show at Commencement.
Wireless smart-home system from the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory could monitor diseases and help the elderly “age in place.”
“Therepi” device attaches directly to damaged heart, enabling delivery of medicine from a port under a patient’s skin to augment cardiac function.
Graduate student Prosper Nyovanie wants to power off-grid communities worldwide with scalable solar electric systems.
Device uses ultrafast “frequency hopping” and data encryption to protect signals from being intercepted and jammed.
Ryan Eustice PhD '05 and his team at the Toyota Research Institute are using artificial intelligence technologies to develop a car incapable of causing accidents.
Program offers path to an accelerated master’s degree at seven universities.
In the wake of the devastating 2017 hurricane, MIT hosted five Puerto Rican undergraduates to help them continue their path toward graduate school.
Faculty from across the Institute tapped to lead new initiative in human and machine intelligence.
New bolometer is faster, simpler, and covers more wavelengths.
Using diamond dust and laser light to control atomic spin, Ashok Ajoy PhD ’16 pursues alternatives to costly conventional imaging technologies.
Commencement speaker says the greatest opportunities are for humans, not technology.
Technology captures water evaporating from cooling towers; prototype to be installed on MIT’s Central Utility Plant.
Professor of nuclear science and engineering Scott Kemp describes the science behind the search for clandestine nuclear sites.