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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 740

HuffPost

Huffington Post reporter Jacqueline Howard writes about how MIT researchers have uncovered what causes the rapid draining of the meltwater lakes atop Greenland’s ice sheet. Howard explains that, “the finding could help scientists better predict how much meltwater from the ice sheet is contributing to rising sea levels, especially as the climate in the region becomes warmer.”

Nature

Professor Vladan Vuletić and his colleagues have successfully developed a new technique for simulating friction between two surfaces at the nanoscale, reports Davide Castelvecchi for Nature. The research “could bring enormous savings by reducing friction between the moving parts of machines,” writes Castelvecchi.

BetaBoston

Janelle Nanos reports for BetaBoston about MIT startup Changing Environments and their solar-powered Soofa public benches that can be used to charge phones or other personal electronics. The Soofa team is launching “an early adopter program for cities and municipalities interested in their smart seating,” Nanos explains. 

HuffPost

Nico Pitney writes for The Huffington Post about GiveDirectly, a charity founded by MIT graduate students that has found success combating poverty by providing direct cash transfers to low-income households in the developing world: “Supporters believe that cash transfers should now be the standard against which the usefulness of other programs are measured,” Pitney explains. 

CNBC

Robert Ferris writes for CNBC that MIT researchers have developed a new technique for creating surfaces that can slide past each other without friction. The researchers hope to use the technique to “build devices that can preserve themselves by being nearly immune to friction.”

New Scientist

Jessica Hamzelou writes for New Scientist that MIT researchers have been able to recover memories using light. The technique could eventually be used to help people with Alzheimer’s or amnesia. Hamzelou writes that Prof. Susumu Tonegawa, hopes to “develop a way to reactivate forgotten memories in people before the brain tissue itself is damaged, as is often the case in dementia.”

BetaBoston

Cybersecurity Factory, an accelerator founded by two MIT graduate students and Highland Capital, recently announced the winning teams who have been accepted into the pilot program, reports Janelle Nanos for BetaBoston. Nanos explains that the goal of Cybersecurity Factory is to “help founders overcome the myriad challenges they often face as they try to get cybersecurity companies off the ground.”

New York Times

Emma Cott of The New York Times writes about Huggable, a robotic teddy bear developed by Professor Cynthia Breazeal and researchers at Boston Children’s Hospital for therapeutic use in pediatric hospitals. “It’s not only the health and emotional and recovery benefits, but also logistical and financial, improving efficiency to the overall health system,” says Breazeal. 

Boston Globe

Boston Globe Magazine reporter Neil Swidey travels to Singapore to learn more about Prof. Emilio Frazzoli’s work developing autonomous vehicles with the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART). Frazzoli explains that he feels driverless cars have “the potential to change everybody’s life.”

Washington Post

Washington Post reporter Chris Mooney writes that MIT researchers have found that giant cracks allow for the rapid draining of lakes on Greenland’s ice sheet. “We know that the ice sheet will continue to increase its contribution to sea level rise over the coming years,” explains lead author Laura Stevens. “The implications of this study show us more of how these processes will play out.”

Reuters

MIT researchers have uncovered how the meltwater lakes atop Greenland’s ice sheet drain, reports Richard Valdmanis for Reuters. Lead author Laura Stevens explains that the findings will help “predict more accurately how supraglacial lakes will affect ice sheet flow and sea level rise.”

The Wall Street Journal

In this video, Monika Auger of The Wall Street Journal describes how MIT engineers have developed a robotic cheetah that can jump over obstacles autonomously. Auger explains that the robot’s vision and path planning systems give it "complete autonomous control over its movements.” 

WBUR

Research affiliate Bina Venkataraman and Kari Smith of the MIT Institute Archives and Special Collections speak with WBUR’s Meghna Chakrabarti about preserving digital data. Smith explains that as an archivist she tries to ensure that information is preserved so that people “have that ability to go back and to look at things and to have those lessons learned over time.”

Boston Globe

In an article for The Boston Globe, John Tirman writes about why people are fleeing countries like Libya, Syria, and Mexico. Tirman writes that much of the migration “results from unsustainable livelihoods, the disruption of traditional forms of agriculture, production, and government services that for decades provided adequate — in many cases, barely so — incomes in the developing world.”

BetaBoston

Scott Kirsner writes for BetaBoston that the MIT team competing in the Amazon Picking Challenge finished second out of the 28 teams participating in the competition. Teams competing in the challenge developed robots that could pick items from shelves and drop them into a box.