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In the Media

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Wired

In an article for Wired, Prof. James J. DiCarlo explains how artificial intelligence can transcend algorithm-based decision making by reverse-engineering the brain. “Armed with an engineering description of the brain, scientists will see new ways to repair, educate, and augment our own minds,” writes DiCarlo.

As Steve Rosenbush notes in the Wall Street Journal, MIT Intelligence Quest hopes to answer two questions: “How does human intelligence work, in engineering terms? And how can we use that deep grasp of human intelligence to build wiser and more useful machines?” explains President Reif.

Wired

Writing for Wired, Prof. Joi Ito explains his concerns regarding ICOs, or initial coin offerings, which are meant to be used to easily send cryptographically secure tokens or coins peer-to-peer. “We haven’t set up the legal, technical, or normative controls yet, and many people are taking advantage of this,” writes Prof. Ito.

Metro

Dean Anantha Chandrakasan speaks with Kristin Toussaint of Metro about MIT Intelligence Quest. “When you bring together researchers from different disciplines, they end up collaborating and creating something very new that they individually couldn't have created,” said Chandrakasan.

Times Higher Education

In an article for Times Higher Education, Anna Gast, president of Imperial College London, praises former MIT presidents, Vannevar Bush and Charles Vest, for their willingness to “advocate for the importance of fundamental research and the need for government support of it.”

TechCrunch

Brian Heater writes for TechCrunch about the new Institute-wide initiative, MIT Intelligence Quest. “Many of the products are moonshoots. They involve teams of scientists and engineers working together. It’s essentially a new model and we need folks and resources behind that,” said Prof. James DiCarlo.

Mercury News

Profs. Polina Anikeeva and Feng Zhang are two of the 2018 recipients of the Vilcek Prizes for Creative Promise, which are awarded to “young immigrants who have demonstrated exceptional promise early in their careers,” reports Lisa Krieger of The Mercury News.

Fast Company

“Intriguing is that [MIT IQ] brings together researchers who study both human intelligence and artificial intelligence. The hope is that better understanding both of them will help develop new algorithms and techniques that can be used broadly,” writes Sean Captain for Fast Company.

Salon

In an article for Salon, Prof. Thomas Kochan writes about what employees would prioritize if they were given the opportunity to participate in discussions about workplace issues. “We found that there are large voice gaps across a range of worker concerns and that they are largest on basic economic issues of compensation and benefits, promotions and job security.”

ZDNet

MIT is launching a new initiative known as MIT Intelligence Quest, “in an effort to combine multiple disciplines to reverse engineer human intelligence, create new algorithms for machine learning and artificial intelligence and foster collaboration,” writes Larry Dignan for ZDNet.

TechCrunch

MIT scientists have found that Legos can be used to create a portable, complex microfluidics lab, reports John Biggs of TechCrunch. While the Legos did have to be modified to run fine channels, the precision of the bricks and panels mean “you don’t need much more than a drill and some tubing to prototype a working microfluidics lab,” explains Biggs.

Boston Globe

MIT Intelligence Quest, a new Institute-wide initiative that will advance human and machine intelligence research, “will help connect researchers across disciplines and support projects in which they work together, as well as seek collaborations with industry,” writes Andy Rosen for The Boston Globe.

WBUR

Prof. Josh Tenenbaum spoke with Bob Oakes on WBUR’s Morning Edition about MIT Intelligence Quest. “This is fundamentally about coupling the basic science of how intelligence works in the human mind and brain, with the quest to engineer new more powerful, more humanlike machines. And to do all of this in service of our mission to make a better world, with a longer-term vision that really only a university like MIT can have,” said Tenenbaum.

Forbes

Writing for Forbes, Frederick Daso describes how MIT’s entrepreneurial ecosystem helped four students in the Sloan School of Management – Devin Basinger, Yishi Zuo, Derek Hans, and Nikhil Punwaney – launch their startup, DeepBench. MIT Sandbox, The Martin Trust Center for MIT Entrepreneurship, and The Legatum Center at MIT are among those programs that “provided critical resources they needed to work.”

Xconomy

Jeff Engel writes for Xconomy about MIT’s ambitions for its newly announced Institute-wide initiative, MIT Intelligence Quest. “If we want A.I. breakthroughs, it’s going to take research in new science. That’s a central inspiration for MIT IQ,” said President Reif.