MIT engineers produce the world’s longest flexible fiber battery
The rechargeable battery can be woven and washed, and could provide power for fiber-based electronic devices and sensors.
The rechargeable battery can be woven and washed, and could provide power for fiber-based electronic devices and sensors.
Mathematical simulations show the new approach may offer faster, cheaper, and more accurate detection, including identifying new variants.
HASTS PhD student Rijul Kochhar tracks changing medical and microbial realities, and examines what they portend for society.
A cultural anthropologist, historians, a computational poet/computer artist, and a playwright receive funding for innovative research projects.
Computational modeling shows that both our ears and our environment influence how we hear.
Five new state and local government partners will work with J-PAL North America to develop rigorous evaluations of policies and programs related to environment, education, economic security, and housing stability.
A new way of processing rare-earth and other key metals to separate them from other materials could reduce environmental impact and cost.
Researchers encourage positive use cases of AI-generated characters for education and well-being.
Assistant professor of civil engineering describes her career in robotics as well as challenges and promises of human-robot interactions.
A new fabrication technique produces low-voltage, power-dense artificial muscles that improve the performance of flying microrobots.
The clinically-trained cell biologist exploits the liver’s unique capacities in search of new medical applications.
SENSE.nano symposium highlights the importance of sensing technologies in medical studies.
Deep-learning methods confidently recognize images that are nonsense, a potential problem for medical and autonomous-driving decisions.
A new model shows that the more polarized and hyperconnected a social network is, the more likely misinformation will spread.
The discovery, based on an unusual event dubbed “the Cow,” may offer astronomers a new way to spot infant compact objects.