To combat false news, correct after reading
Study shows people are influenced more by fact-checks after they read news headlines, not before.
Study shows people are influenced more by fact-checks after they read news headlines, not before.
MIT scholars discuss what is needed for the country to support its longstanding form of government.
Guillermo Toral PhD '20 finds health care quality drops in months leading up to mayoral elections, and if the incumbent loses, the quality continues to fall.
MIT political scientist Richard Nielsen combines ethnography and big data to analyze clerics and preachers in the Islamic world.
Political science PhD candidate Nasir Almasri studies conflicts that emerge at the intersection of politics and religious traditions, with a focus on humanizing those involved.
During virtual celebration, alumni attest to transformative reach of MIT Global Startup Labs.
Choucri, Drennan, Fisher, Gershenfeld, Li, and Rus are recognized for their efforts to advance science.
Asya Magazinnik finds disparate implementation of national policies in jurisdictions across the United States.
Graduate student Manon Revel uses quantitative methodologies to investigate how advertising in online publications affects trust in journalism.
Political scientist Erik Lin-Greenberg explores how a burgeoning high-tech arsenal is shaping military conflict.
MIT and Imperial College London to tackle dual challenges of climate and pollution through new seed fund focus.
Experts analyze a global trend: democratic governments that collapse from within while maintaining a veneer of legitimacy.
Professors Kathleen Thelen and Paul Osterman explore the highly fragmented US workforce training system and comparable programs in Europe.
MIT political scientist explains the responsibilities leaders have for shaping and sharing factual, truthful information in the nation's political discourse.
Political science graduate student Matthew Cancian brings his own military experience to bear on battlefield psychology.