Injectable antenna could safely power deep-tissue medical implants
The technology would allow battery-free, minimally invasive, scalable bioelectronic implants such as pacemakers, neuromodulators, and body process monitors.
The technology would allow battery-free, minimally invasive, scalable bioelectronic implants such as pacemakers, neuromodulators, and body process monitors.
Widely known for his Synthetic Performer, Csound language, and work on the MPEG-4 audio standard, Vercoe positioned MIT as a hub for music technology through leadership roles with the Media Lab and Music and Theater Arts Section.
MIT MAD has established new professorships and appointed three MIT faculty to advance design education across disciplines.
A wide range of faculty disciplines showcases the breadth of research and scholarship across the school.
In “Scientific InQueery,” LGBTQ+ MIT faculty and graduate students describe finding community and living their authentic lives in the research enterprise.
The 10 Design Fellows are MIT graduate students working at the intersection of design and multiple disciplines across the Institute.
New “AI Comes Out of the Closet” system seeks to merge artificial intelligence and LGBTQIA+ support.
Tactile stimulation improved motor performance, reduced phosphorylated tau, preserved neurons and synapses, and reduced DNA damage, a new study shows.
A pandemic-fueled transformation of the MIT course MAS.S64 (How to Grow (Almost) Anything) leads to next steps in democratizing synthetic biology.
MIT Morningside Academy for Design’s inaugural fellows chart a new course.
Martin Luther King Jr. Visiting Professors and Scholars will enhance and enrich the MIT community through engagement with students and faculty.
Virtual conference gathered students, faculty, and industry partners to explore the future of microsystems and nanotechnology.
The honorees include four MIT graduate students in electrical engineering and computer science, economics, and media arts and sciences.
Tulle-like DefeXtiles can be 3D printed with no custom software or hardware.
Micro/nano processing course fabricates devices in MIT.nano’s facilities.