Empowering Cambridge youth through data activism
Mayor’s youth employment program brought local high schoolers to MIT this summer.
Mayor’s youth employment program brought local high schoolers to MIT this summer.
Separating densely packed molecules before imaging allows them to become visible for the first time.
Martin Luther King Jr. Visiting Professors and Scholars will enhance and enrich the MIT community through engagement with students and faculty.
Researchers develop a comfortable, form-fitting fabric that recognizes its wearer’s activities, like walking, running, and jumping.
This robotic system uses radio frequency signals, computer vision, and complex reasoning to efficiently find items hidden under a pile.
Master’s student Chelsi Cocking combines her love for computer science and design in her research and outreach efforts at the Media Lab.
Labby has developed an optical milk scanner based on materials-sensing technology that dairy farmers can use to measure the health of their cows.
Thousands of children participate in MIT-developed artificial intelligence curriculum.
Delegation meets campus leaders, with an eye toward AI applications and the Icelandic language.
Twenty winning projects will link industry member priorities with research groups across campus to develop scalable climate solutions.
IDEAS awards more than $50,000 in grants across six student-led teams to develop projects addressing social and environmental challenges.
The TESSERAE project, a design for self-assembling space structures and habitats, has sent prototypes to the International Space Station.
The programs are designed to foster an understanding of how artificial intelligence technologies work, including their social implications.
Faculty leaders highlight innovations that can close longstanding knowledge gaps and reimagine how the world responds to the climate crisis.
MIT scientists hope to deploy a fleet of drones to get a better sense of how much carbon the ocean is absorbing, and how much more it can take.