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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 359

Scientific American

Scientific American reporter Wade Roush spotlights The Engine as “one bright spot in the world of tech investing.” Ann DeWitt, a general partner at The Engine notes that the researchers The Engine tends to work with are “compelled into entrepreneurship because of what they're trying to achieve.”

Boston Globe

Professors Simon Johnson and Retsef Levi writes for The Boston Globe about how the U.S. can prepare to safely reopen the American economy without reigniting another wave of Covid-19 infections. “We must start to build the information and response systems necessary to sustain a different public health strategy: targeted social distancing,” they write.

Marketplace

During an interview with David Brancaccio of Marketplace, Prof. Esther Duflo advocates for providing direct cash transfers to help the poor during the Covid-19 pandemic. “There is no trade off in poor countries between helping people sustain themselves financially and getting the health conditions to improve; the two have to go hand in hand,” says Duflo.

Fast Company

MIT researchers have developed a new website aimed at K-12 students aimed at helping them learn more about artificial intelligence, reports Mark Wilson for Fast Company. “The site provides 60 activities, lesson plans, and links to interactive AI experiments that MIT and companies like Google have developed in the past,” writes Wilson.

Reuters

An app developed by MIT researches to help track the spread of Covid-19 will be introduced in several communities around the U.S., reports Paresh Dave for Reuters.

Newsweek

Newsweek reporter Aristos Georgiou writes that researchers from MIT, BioBot Analytics (an MIT startup) and other institutions have found more traces of the coronavirus in wastewater samples than anticipated given confirmed cases. “Having accurate estimates of disease prevalence will help cities plan for what kind of resources they will need when disease prevalence hits its peak,” explains Prof. Eric Alm.

ABC News

ABC News correspondent Lindsey Davis speaks with MIT researchers about their work developing an inexpensive alternative to a traditional ventilator. “Our goal is to provide the best research information as fast as we can and share that so that partners around the world can scale up and take this through,” explains research scientist Nevan Hanumara.

The Washington Post

Washington Post reporter Cat Zakrzewski spotlights how MIT researchers are developing a system that uses smartphone Bluetooth signals to track the spread of Covid-19 while protecting privacy. “Our effort is designed to show that there is a privacy preserving way of doing this kind of automated contact tracing,” explains Principal Research Scientist Daniel Weitzner.

WBUR

Researchers from MIT, MGH and other institutions are developing a system that automates contact tracing for Covid-19 using smartphone Bluetooth signals while preserving user privacy, reports Zeninjor Enwemeka for WBUR. "It's got to be part of a public health strategy," says Principal Research Scientist Daniel Weitzner of the system. "We're developing this as a tool that we hope can be useful to that process."

Fast Company

Fast Company reporter Katharine Schwab writes that researchers from MIT are building a system that uses random identifiers emitted by smartphone Bluetooth signals to help track the spread of Covid-19. “Instead of an eye in the sky that watches everybody, we want to have the phones that people are carrying around tell how close they’ve been to other people,” says Prof. Ron Rivest.

TechCrunch

A new contact tracing method developed by MIT researchers uses Bluetooth signals emitted by smartphones to trace the spread of Covid-19 while maintaining privacy, reports Darrell Etherington for TechCrunch. Etherington notes that, “MIT’s system sidesteps entirely many of the thorniest privacy-related issues around contact tracing.”

The Wall Street Journal

Wall Street Journal reporter Agam Shah spotlights the MIT Covid-19 Challenge’s Beat the Pandemic virtual hackathon, which brought together 1,500 participants working in 238 teams. During the hackathon, MIT provided participants with “access to open data sets including JHU’s epidemiological data repository and Covid-19 information compiled by the World Health Organization and the European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention.”

The Tech

Whitney Zhang of The Tech writes about newly established MIT EMS practices in response to Covid-19. In addition to updated PPE protocols and working on smaller crews, MIT EMS is prepared to assist Cambridge’s Pro EMS and the Boston Area Ambulance Mutual Aid Network to “substantially help out with the effort,” says Suzanne Blake, MIT Emergency Management director.

CNET

CNET reporter Stephen Shankland writes that MIT researchers are “developing a smartphone app they hope will tamp down the coronavirus pandemic without trampling on privacy.” Prof. Ron Rivest explains that, "the way to flatten the curve is to get people to be sequestered who have been exposed as quickly as you can. That means identifying people as quickly as you can."

CNBC

CNBC reporter Riley de Leon writes that Prof. Feng Zhang and Pinterest CEO Ben Silbermann have launched a new app that allows people to report healthy symptoms and could help "researchers reveal outbreak hot spots and track the ongoing spread” of Covid-19."