Objects can now change colors like a chameleon
Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory team creates new reprogrammable ink that lets objects change colors using light.
Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory team creates new reprogrammable ink that lets objects change colors using light.
New capabilities allow “roboats” to change configurations to form pop-up bridges, stages, and other structures.
New approach harnesses the same fabrication processes used for silicon chips, offers key advance toward next-generation computers.
Nearly $12 million machine will let MIT researchers run more ambitious AI models.
MIT system “learns” how to optimally allocate workloads across thousands of servers to cut costs, save energy.
Submerged system uses the vibration of “piezoelectric” materials to generate power and send and receive data.
Prototype machine-learning technology co-developed by MIT scientists speeds processing by up to 175 times over traditional methods.
“Risk-aware” traffic engineering could help service providers such as Microsoft, Amazon, and Google better utilize network infrastructure.
In “semiautonomous” cars, older drivers may need more time to take the wheel when responding to the unexpected.
New research from the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory uses machine learning to customize clothing designs.
Model replaces the laborious process of annotating massive patient datasets by hand.
Researchers hope the system can zero in on the right patients to enroll in clinical trials, to speed discovery of drug treatments.
Two longtime friends explore how computer vision systems go awry.
A course that combines machine learning and health care explores the promise of applying artificial intelligence to medicine.