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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 466

The Washington Post

In an article for The Washington Post, Beth Simone Noveck highlights RiskMap, an open-source platform developed by researchers from MIT’s Urban Risk Lab that allows users to gather and access information about disaster areas. Noveck writes that “RiskMap is a paradigmatic example of collective intelligence.”

The Wall Street Journal

Wall Street Journal reporters Annie Gasparro and Jesse Newman spotlight the Media Lab’s Open Agriculture Initiative, where Caleb Harper is at work developing a Food Computer. Harper explains that the Food Computer, a controlled environment where all of a plant’s needs are controlled and tracked, is a “fundamentally different way of thinking about where we plant things and why.”

Forbes

Forbes contributor Jeff McMahon writes that a new study by MIT researchers finds that nuclear reactors “cost so much in the West because of poor construction management practices.” The study’s authors suggest several ways to reduce the cost of constructing a nuclear plant, including standardizing multi-unit sites, seismic isolation, and modular construction.

BBC News

Prof. Tim Berners-Lee has created a new technology aimed at allowing people more control over their online data, reports the BBC News. Berners-Lee felt that the “current model of handing over lots of data to many different online services did not serve people well,” the BBC explains.

Forbes

In an article for Forbes, Charles Towers-Clark spotlights how MIT researchers developed a surgical technique that allows amputees to receive feedback from prosthetic limbs. The technique, Towers-Clark writes, “uses a muscle graft from another part of the body to complete the muscle pair, avoiding rejection which currently occurs in around 20% of cases, and allowing the patient to communicate naturally with the new limb.”

Wired

Wired reporter Megan Molteni highlights Prof. Aviv Regev’s work leading the Human Cell Atlas, an effort to catalog the cells in the human body that could eventually serve as a roadmap for understanding and treating disease. “From the beginning we have designed this as a public good and an open resource to enable science around the world,” Regev explains.

Bloomberg

MIT Sloan Prof. Antionette Schoar discusses her research on sidecar funds versus main buyout funds with Peter Barnes, Pat Carroll and Janet Wu on Bloomberg Radio. “When you compare the performance [of the two funds], we find that the side vehicle is underperforming the main funds of the partnerships that are sponsoring them,” explains Schoar.

Forbes

A recent study from the MIT Energy Initiative finds that the cost of nuclear reactors can be twice as high in the U.S. and Europe compared to Asian countries. The researchers found that costs were “bundled up in the site preparation, the building construction, [and] the civil works,” rather than the reactor itself, writes Jeff McMahon for Forbes.

Corporation member Samuel Bodman passed away in El Pas, TX at the age of 79. Bodman, who earned a doctoral degree in chemical engineering from MIT in 1965, also served as a professor of chemical engineering at the Institute before becoming CEO of Cabot Corp., reports James R. Hagerty for The Wall Street Journal.

Forbes

Prof. Tim Berners-Lee, creator of the World Wide Web, has announced the launch of his new company Inrupt. The startup will use an open-source project called Solid, which Berners-Lee developed with colleagues at MIT, to “reshape the web and ‘restore the power and agency of the individuals’ using it,” writes Jason Evangelho for Forbes.

New Scientist

MIT Media Lab graduate student Artem Dementyev has created a palm-sized robot with suction-cup feet, known as SkinBot, which can crawl along the body, writes Douglas Heaven of New Scientist. The robot was designed to “carry out a medical inspection of a patient when there is no doctor nearby or when it would be too dangerous for a doctor to approach,” explains Heaven.

Boston Herald

Padma Lalshmi, host of Bravo’s Top Chef, delivered remarks at MIT’s fourth annual Open Endoscopy Forum. Ahead of her speech, Lakshmi spent the day at MIT touring labs and engaging with students, reports Olivia Vanni for The Boston Herald

Fast Company

MIT’s Mediated Matter Group has developed small robots that can turn fiberglass filament into large 3-D structures, writes Jesus Diaz of Fast Company. The Fiberbots could eventually be used to build structures “in extreme situations, such as after natural disasters,” suggests Diaz.  

TechCrunch

TechCrunch’s Ziad Reslan highlights aspects of MIT’s Solve innovation challenge, including appointing multiple winners and maintaining a relationship after the challenge, that distinguish it among a crowded field of similar competitions. “Our value-add is providing a network, from MIT and beyond, and then brokering partnerships,” says Hala Hanna, managing director of community for Solve.

Forbes

MIT researchers have developed neural networks that can recognize speech patterns that are indicative of depression, writes Anna Powers for Forbes. “Because the model is generalized and does not rely on specific questions to be asked,” explains Powers, “the hope is that this model can be implemented into mobile apps that will allow people to detect depression through natural conversation.”