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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 655

CNBC

CNBC reporter Robert Ferris chronicles the late Prof. Amar Bose’s quest to develop the perfect set of speakers. Ferris explains that Bose, a former faculty member at MIT and founder of the Bose Corporation, “didn't set out to sell speaker systems and headphones. He began his career as an academic engineer at MIT in the late 1950s.”

WBUR

During a forum at MIT, Attorney General Maura Healey spoke about the need for protections for online consumers, reports Zeninjor Enwemeka for WBUR. “We just need to make sure that big data isn’t being used to give certain consumers an unfair deal based on who they are, where they are or what they do online,” Healey said. 

Boston Herald

MIT researchers have found a possible link between attention deficit disorders and autism, reports Lindsay Kalter for The Boston Herald. “One of the long-term goals is gene therapy where we can actually introduce genetic material that might be missing from the human,” explains grad. student Michael Wells.

Popular Science

Popular Science reporter Claire Maldarelli writes that researchers from MIT have identified how sensory overload occurs for people with neurodevelopmental disorders. Based off their findings, the researchers hope they can "classify these disorders in a better way, but also develop therapies that alleviate or diminish the symptoms.”

Boston Globe

Kevin Hartnett writes for The Boston Globe about an exhibition by the MIT Center for Advanced Urbanism that examines the future of suburban living. “Urban planning doesn’t focus enough attention on suburbia, it focuses on making dense cities denser, which is where a minority of the world’s population wants to live,” explains Prof. Alan Berger.

Boston Globe

In an article for The Boston Globe, Prof. Emeritus Richard Schmalensee writes that policies should be enacted in Massachusetts that make solar power cost-effective for all consumers. Schmalensee writes that, “public policies must place a greater emphasis on rewarding the lowest-cost sources of solar electricity.”

CBS News

Researchers have created a gravity map of Mars that provides insight into the planet’s interior, reports Brian Mastroianni for CBS News.  MIT postdoc Antonio Genova says the map will be, “helpful for future Mars exploration, because better knowledge of the planet's gravity anomalies helps mission controllers insert spacecraft more precisely into orbit around Mars.”

The Wall Street Journal

Dr. Matthias Wikenbach speaks with Angus Loten of The Wall Street Journal about how big data and the Internet of Things can be used to speed up the last mile of deliveries. Loten writes that “data can be fed into creating better delivery training programs, more efficient routes, and helping companies determine the best type of delivery vehicles.”

The Wall Street Journal

Wall Street Journal reporter Angus Loten writes that MIT researchers are investigating the viability of developing underground networks where autonomous vehicles could deliver goods in urban centers. According to Loten, Prof. Sertac Karaman explained that “subterranean drones have a number of advantages over unmanned aerial vehicles.”

HuffPost

In an article for The Huffington Post, Erik Rancatore highlights how “researchers at the MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub have developed a method to incorporate the risk and repair costs of damage from hurricanes and earthquakes into life-cycle analysis of residential buildings.”

Popular Science

Popular Science reporter Kelsey Atherton writes that MIT researchers have developed a model that would allow cars to travel through intersections by communicating with one another, eliminating the need for traffic lights. “Rather than traffic lights working as valves dictating which stream can flow, the cars themselves are adjusted, cleanly separated and passed along,” Atherton explains. 

CBS News

During this CBS Radio segment, Sam Litzinger spotlights a new model developed by MIT researchers that would allow sensor-enabled vehicles to travel safely through intersections without traffic lights. Litzinger explains that the researchers have developed “what amounts to a central nervous system that can connect intersections with an incoming vehicle.”

NPR

Researchers have developed a new gravity map of Mars using data compiled by NASA spacecraft, reports Merrit Kennedy for NPR. Postdoc Antonio Genova, lead author of the study, explains that the technology used to examine Mars is similar to how "a doctor uses an X-ray to see inside a patient." 

New Scientist

New Scientist reporter Jacob Aron writes that researchers analyzing data gathered about Pluto by the New Horizons probe have found that liquids may have existed on Pluto’s surface. The researchers also mapped Pluto’s climate zones and found that some regions are both arctic and tropical. "There is no analogue to that here on Earth,” said Prof. Richard Binzel.

HuffPost

MIT researchers have found that communication between vehicles could ease traffic at intersections, writes Thomas Tamblyn for The Huffington Post. The researchers found that by communicating with one another, vehicles could maintain safe distances, removing the need for traffic lights.