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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 690

New Scientist

Research co-authored by Prof. Frank Levy in DUSP examined the efficiency of robotic legal assistants.  “They concluded that only about 13 percent of legal work will be taken over by computers within the next five years,” writes Aviva Rutkin for New Scientist.

Scientists at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard have “identified key genetic traits that for the first time point to a biological mechanism behind schizophrenia,” writes Shirley Wang of The Wall Street Journal.

The Tech

John Urschel, a PhD candidate in math and offensive lineman in the NFL, speaks with The Tech's Ray Wang about "juggling two worlds." Urschel describes how his competitiveness in football translates to his studies: "This is competitive ‘me’ against the unknown — against things I’m trying to solve."

Today Show

In this Today Show segment, Prof. Earl Miller and Prof. Robert Desimone discuss how the brain reacts to the information overload that comes from using multiple digital tools at once. “The brain has a great deal of difficulty processing multiple bits of data at once,” explains Miller. "We are very, very single minded.” 

CNBC

Researchers at the Koch Institute have been taking steps to find a possible cure for type 1 diabetes. Holly Ellyatt of CNBC writes that the team has developed a device to prevent “implanted insulin-producing cells from being attacked by the immune system for six months.”

BBC News

BBC’s Colin Barras writes about research from Prof. Paul O’Gorman which finds that extreme snowfalls are an expected consequence of climate change. O’Gorman says “extreme snowfall events respond to climate change quite differently from total seasonal snowfall."

Forbes India

MIT, Tata Trusts & Tata Inst. of Social Science announced the creation of a new digital education platform known as the Connected Learning Initiative (CLIx). Aveek Datta for Forbes India writes that the program seeks to “create new learning experiences and educational opportunities for secondary school students in India.”

Popular Science

Popular Science‘s Dave Gershgorn writes about Prof. Marvin Minsky’s contribution to artificial intelligence.  Medis Lab research scientist Joscha Bach described Minsky as a “great thinker not only in computer science and mathematics, but in how we understand the mind.”

The Huffington Post

Prof. Phillip Sharp co-authored this piece for Huffington Post about VP Joe Biden’s  national cancer research initiative. “The most important thing about collaboration is that it unquestionably saves lives.”

The Huffington Post

 John Tirman in the Center for Int’l Studies writes for Huffington Post that upcoming Syria talks in Geneva most likely will not resolve the crisis. “The ‘sides’ in the conflict are nearly indecipherable to all but dedicated observers,” he writes.

WBUR

Prof. Marvin Minsky, who helped found MIT's Artificial Intelligence Lab, passed away at 88. “Marvin was a person who loved ideas and he cherished the people who came up with ideas,” says Prof. Michael Hawley on WBUR’s All Things Considered.

The Washington Post

Washington Post reporter Joel Achenbach writes about the life and work of Prof. emeritus Marvin Minsky, who died on Sunday. Achebach writes that Minsky’s colleagues knew him “as a man who was strikingly clever in conversation, with an ability to anticipate what others are thinking -- and then conjure up an even more intriguing variation on those thoughts.”

Boston.com

MIT will celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Institute’s move from Boston to Cambridge this May, reports Kristin Toussaint for Boston.com. Toussaint writes that MIT is hosting a "competition in which MIT alumni, students, staff, and faculty can create vessels that will make their own voyage across river." 

Boston Globe

In an article for The Boston Globe, Bryan Marquard writes about Prof. emeritus Marvin Minsky, co-founder of the former AI Lab (now CSAIL), a founding member of the Media Lab, and a pioneer in the field of AI, who passed away on Sunday.  

Boston Globe

The Boston Globe’s Steve Annear writes that MIT will host a parade to honor the 100th anniversary of the Institute’s move to Cambridge, and MIT community members are invited to create vehicles for the parade.  “Who knows what students will come up with?” explains Prof. John Ochsendorf. “The idea is that they come by land or by sea.”