Flocks of assembler robots show potential for making larger structures
Researchers make progress toward groups of robots that could build almost anything, including buildings, vehicles, and even bigger robots.
Researchers make progress toward groups of robots that could build almost anything, including buildings, vehicles, and even bigger robots.
New prize program recognizes MIT researchers who make data openly accessible and reusable.
Lane leaves a lasting legacy at the Institute and on tribal communities around the country.
A contemporary reinterpretation of an 18th century ballet reveals the fragility of orientalist fantasies.
Liam Gale, new program administrator for the Student Veteran Success Office, describes experiences of student veterans and how the Institute supports them.
A new study suggests mobile data collected while traveling over bridges could help evaluate their integrity.
The first African American to receive tenure at MIT, Jones championed greater diversity and inclusion at the Institute and beyond.
Carlo Ratti investigates how digital technologies transform our urban spaces and how they can be harnessed to design sustainable cities for the future.
Using a new technology, researchers hope to create better control systems for prosthetic limbs.
The system measures biological and environmental changes, and detects contact between the mask and the wearer’s skin.
Winning project supports collaboration between public housing residents in New York City and a local nonprofit offering training for work in the digital economy.
Task Force 2021 and Beyond report highlights innovative teaching practices that MIT instructors have incorporated into in-person classes, informed by remote-teaching experiences.
MIT Morningside Academy for Design’s inaugural fellows chart a new course.
MIT chemist designs novel molecules that could be used for quantum sensing and communication; visiting scholar Moriba Jah is also awarded, for work on space sustainability.
The restored diploma of Robert Robinson Taylor, MIT’s first Black graduate — presented by his great-granddaughter Valerie Jarrett — highlights connections between the Institute and Tuskegee University.