Artificial intelligence predicts patients’ race from their medical images
Study shows AI can identify self-reported race from medical images that contain no indications of race detectable by human experts.
Study shows AI can identify self-reported race from medical images that contain no indications of race detectable by human experts.
MIT and Mass General Brigham researchers and physicians connect in person to bring AI into mainstream health care.
Have a question about numerical differential equations? Odds are this CSAIL research affiliate has already addressed it.
Competitive seed grants launch yearlong investigations of novel hypotheses about potential causes, biomarkers, treatments of Alzheimer’s and ALS.
MIT researchers can now estimate how much information data are likely to contain, in a more accurate and scalable way than previous methods.
Microbes that safely break down antibiotics could prevent opportunistic infections and reduce antibiotic resistance.
AIMBE's highest honor recognizes MIT professor's contributions to neural signal processing, anesthesiology advances.
Why has it taken the scientific community so long to include sex as a biological variable in research and analysis as a matter of course?
An efficient machine-learning method uses chemical knowledge to create a learnable grammar with production rules to build synthesizable monomers and polymers.
MIT spinout Frequency Therapeutics’ drug candidate stimulates the growth of hair cells in the inner ear.
Senior Isha Mehrotra works to discover more about autoimmune diseases, aiming for a future in which patients can be treated effectively or avoid the conditions altogether.
Inspired by an ancient technology, engineers design a sensor that can measure pressure inside the digestive tract.
Postdoc Digbijay Mahat became a cancer researcher to improve health care in Nepal, but the Covid-19 pandemic exposed additional resource disparities.
Professor describes a new research center he is working to develop where researchers will seek to improve patient care by integrating neuroscience and anesthesiology.
The protein subunit vaccine, which can be manufactured using engineered yeast, has shown promise in preclinical studies.