Optimizing complex decision-making
“Operations in practice are very messy, but I think that’s what makes them exciting,” says graduate student Jean Pauphilet.
“Operations in practice are very messy, but I think that’s what makes them exciting,” says graduate student Jean Pauphilet.
Neurologist and researcher Diane Chan pitches in to help New England get through tough times.
PhD candidate’s journey to the center of the plant cell wall relies on nuclear magnetic resonance technology.
Ezra Zuckerman Sivan, Jinhua Zhao, and Kamal Youcef-Toumi honored as “Committed to Caring.”
The $90,000 merit-based fellowship funds graduate studies for outstanding immigrants and children of immigrants.
MIT scientists Omar Abudayyeh and Jonathan Gootenberg explain the current state of Covid-19 testing, and how a CRISPR tool may help solve the supply problem.
Critical research continues, students and staff are receiving support, and contingency planning proceeds for eventual phased reopening.
Committing to aggressive conservation efforts could rebuild ocean habitats and species populations in a few decades.
Entrepreneurial groups around the Institute have launched initiatives to address challenges brought on by the Covid-19 pandemic.
MIT postoc and WISDM founder reflects on her role models and the Institute's innovation and entrepreneurship community.
MLK Visiting Scholar Benjamin McDonald uses synthetic organic chemistry in the Swager lab to answer questions with more questions.
MIT graduate student is assessing the impacts of artificial intelligence on military power, with a focus on the US and China.
The survey, deployed every four years, is a unique, confidential forum for community input.
A new study suggests a path to more efficient error correction, which may help make quantum computers and sensors more practical.