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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 606

The Washington Post

Writing for The Washington Post, Prof. Jessika Trancik examines how federal policy could impact global progress on responding to climate change. “We estimate that the U.S. can achieve the majority share of its original 2025 emissions reduction target even with federal policy changes,” Trancik explains. 

Boston Magazine

Pimploy Phongsirivech of Boston Magazine writes about MIT’s Hacking Arts Festival, which brought together artists, entrepreneurs, engineers, designers and scientists working at the intersection of art and technology. Phongsirivech writes that the event was a “collaborative effort to not only envision but also to actualize the future.”

Boston Globe

Bryan Marquard writes for The Boston Globe about the legacy of Prof. Emeritus Jay Forrester, a computing pioneer who died at age 98. Marquard writes that Forrester was a “trailblazer in computers in the years after World War II,” then “pivoted from computers into another new field and founded the discipline of system dynamics modeling.”

Boston Globe

Boston Globe reporter Eric Moskowitz writes that MIT researchers are developing a prosthetic limb that can be controlled by the user’s brain waves. Researchers in Prof. High Herr’s lab collaborated with surgeons at Brigham and Women’s Hospital to “devise an amputation surgery that could prepare a limb for a brain-controlled prosthetic.” 

The New Yorker

In an article for The New Yorker, Nathan Heller highlights research specialist Kate Darling’s work examining how humans interact with robots. Darlings’ research suggests that “our aversion to abusing lifelike machines comes from “‘societal values.’”

The Washington Post

Prof. Fotini Christia and grad students Elizabeth Dekeyser and Dean Knox write for The Washington Post about how they surveyed religious Shiites from Iran and Iraq concerning their views on religion, politics and more. The authors write that the survey, which was conducted during an annual pilgrimage, “presents a unique template for surveying hard-to-reach populations in an increasingly mobile world.”

Economist

MIT researchers have devised a capsule that can deliver medications over extended periods of time, and could be useful in halting the spread of malaria. The Economist notes that the device could be a “useful addition to the armory being deployed against malaria. And that, alone, could save many lives a year.”

The Daily Beast

Michael Casey, a senior advisor for the Media Lab’s Digital Currency Initiative, suggests a solution to the increasing popularity of fake news in a Daily Beast article. Casey writes that we need “the software to distinguish between ‘fake,’ manufactured networks and those composed of people who honestly and independently choose to follow a content provider and share their work.” 

WCVB

In this WCVB segment, CSAIL postdocs Robert MacCurdy and Jeffrey Lipton explain their work developing a shock-absorbing material that could be used to help protect robots and smartphones, or in helmets. Liquid is used in the material to “absorb the energy and keep it inside,” Lipton explains.

Associated Press

“Milk Drop Coronet,” a photograph captured by the late MIT professor Harold “Doc” Edgerton, is featured in TIME Magazine’s multimedia project featuring the publication’s 100 most influential images, according to the AP. Edgerton’s photo used strobe lights to “refine moments otherwise imperceptible to the human eye.”

TechCrunch

TechCrunch reporter Devin Coldewey writes that Margaret Hamilton, a computing pioneer who led the development of the Apollo program’s on-board flight software during her time at MIT, has been named a recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Coldewey writes that Hamilton is an inspiring figure “for anyone looking to enter the fields of computer science and engineering.”

Boston Globe

In an article for The Boston Globe’s special section on the 2016 “Top Places to Work,” Sacha Pfeiffer highlights MIT’s new commuter benefits. Pfeiffer writes that MIT is providing “employees free MBTA bus and subway access through a chip embedded in their university ID cards.”

Boston Globe

Prof. Thomas Kochan speaks with Boston Globe reporter Hae Young Yoo about how businesses can engage and invest in their employees while still turning a profit. Kochan notes that “having some voice in how the workplace is shaped creates an environment that motivates and gives employees a real sense that they belong there.”

New York Times

Prof. Emeritus Jay Forrester, whose research on computing and organizations led to the field of computer modeling, died at age 98, reports Katie Hafner for The New York Times. Prof. John Sterman explained that thanks to Forrester’s work, “simulations of dynamic systems are now indispensable throughout the physical and social sciences.”

Financial Times

Jayesh Kannan, a graduate student in the Sloan School of Management, writes for the Financial Times about how technology is changing the recruitment process for business school graduates. “Like pretty much everything in the 21st century, the recruiting process today is no less immune to ‘disruptive’ forces: evolving student interest, a changing landscape of recruiters and technology."