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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 464

CNBC

During the Barclays Asia Forum, Prof. Erik Brynjolfsson urged companies to prioritize cybersecurity in order to take advantage of the opportunities provided by the growing digital economy, reports Saheli Roy Choudhury for CNBC. Brynjolfsson noted that the threat of cyberattacks "can be addressed much more effectively than it has been. I think we're just not taking it seriously enough."

NIH

A team of researchers led by Prof. J. Christopher Love has developed a system to produce on-demand clinical-grade vaccines and drugs, writes Dr. Francis Collins on the NIH Director’s Blog. In addition to allowing on site production for hospitals the systems could also “produce biologic treatments specially tailored to attack the cancer of a particular individual,” suggests Collins.

Yahoo News

Researchers at the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology are part of a team that developed a potential treatment for drug-resistant malaria, which is expected to be publicly available within the next decade. The research “could lead to other drugs against cancer and infectious diseases such as dengue and tuberculosis,” writes Casandra Wong for Yahoo! News.

Wired

Prof. Joi Ito, director of the Media Lab, writes for Wired about what he calls the Great Digitization Event (GDE), during which the internet is quickly killing off systems, but also allowing new organizations to emerge. “I see the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements also using new versions of the same methods to begin the long path to ending centuries of patriarchal power,” Ito writes.

Boston Globe

Adam Vaccaro of The Boston Globe writes that Prof. Joi Ito’s opening keynote address at HUBweek’s Change Maker Conference focused on how society adapts to major changes. “You can try to get companies to behave carefully by changing regulations, but you’re not going to fundamentally change the outcome unless you change the goals,” explains Ito.

Associated Press

MIT alumnus William Nordaus has been awarded the 2018 Nobel Prize in Economics for his work studying the interaction between climate change and the economy, reports Dave Keyton and Jim Heintz for the AP. Nordhaus shared the award with Paul Romer, who also conducted graduate work at MIT.

STAT

Postdoctoral associates Tyler Clites, Cesar de la Fuente-Nunez and Amye Kirtane were named to STAT’s 2018 Wunderkinds list, which spotlights researchers that are “blazing new trails as they attempt to answer some of the biggest questions in science and medicine.”

CNN

CNN reporter Susan Scutti writes that MIT researchers have found that climate change could cause an increase in mental health issues. During a 30-day period, exposure to hotter temperatures and higher rates of precipitation “produced increases in the probability that people were going to report some mental health problem in that period,” explains research scientist Nick Obradovich.

Los Angeles Times

MIT researchers find that hotter and more extreme weather can negatively impact a person’s mental health, reports Karen Kaplan for The Los Angeles Times. The researchers explain that, “given the vital role that sound mental health plays in personal, social, and economic well-being, our findings provide added evidence that climatic changes pose substantial risks to human systems.”

CNBC

CNBC reporter Andrew Zaleski writes that MIT researchers have developed a neuromorphic chip design that could help advance the development of computers that operate like humans. The design could “lead to processors capable of carrying out machine learning tasks with dramatically lower energy demands,” Zaleski explains. 

The Verge

Verge reporter James Vincent writes that MIT researchers have developed a challenge, the Minimal Turing Test, which prompts participants to select a word that can prove that they are human. “It tells you something about the gap between humans and smart robots,” explains graduate student John McCoy, “that people who have never had to think about this situation before came up with a lot of smart and funny results.”

New York Times

New York Times reporter Penelope Green profiles Prof. Neri Oxman, spotlighting her work with material ecology. Paola Antonelli, senior curator of architecture and design at the MoMA, says that the “reason why she is a gift to the field of architecture and design is that her science works, her aesthetics work, and her theory works.”

Mercury News

The Zero Robotics Competition, co-sponsored by the MIT Space Systems Lab, is inspiring middle school students to improve their robotics skills, writes Rachel Basso for The Mercury News.

The Wall Street Journal

A paper by Prof. Sandy Pentland and Research Affiliate Yaniv Altshuler explains how social physics can be used to help detect cybercrime, writes Visiting Lecturer Irving Wladawsky-Berger for The Wall Street Journal. Wladawsky-Berger explains that Pentland and Altshuler show how social physics can easily decipher “the use of code-words, evasive behavior or any other attempt to mask one’s intentions.”

Popular Science

Popular Science reporter Rob Verger writes that MIT researchers have developed a new AI system that can help identify fake news. Verger explains that the researchers set out to create a tool that could “evaluate how factually strong different sites are, and their political bias.”