Demaines selected for Guggenheim Fellowship
Honored for work with origami from wood, plastic, metal and glass.
Honored for work with origami from wood, plastic, metal and glass.
Professors recognized for their contributions to computer science
Computer modeling may resolve conflicting results and offer hints for new drug-design strategies.
Two assistant professors at MIT are among 16 recipients nationwide.
MIT researchers improve efficiency of quantum-dot photovoltaic system by adding a forest of nanowires.
Participants discuss how they are 'reimagining the MIT classroom.'
A new way of reasoning about what happens when a robot’s limb strikes an object could lead to more efficient and reliable robotic-control systems.
Professor cited for 'commitment and dedication to biomedical informatics'
Techniques used to ensure that airplanes won’t stall out in flight could be adapted to prove that computer programs won’t divide by zero.
Honored for inventing the World Wide Web
Griffith, Miller, Schulz and Teng awarded the Institute’s highest undergraduate teaching honor.
Team honored for ‘revolutionizing the science of cryptography.’
For database-driven applications, new software could reduce hardware requirements by 95 percent while actually improving performance.
Professor Erik Demaine was cited for his contributions to computational geometry and data structures.