Skip to content ↓

In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 781

Scientific American

In a piece for Scientific American, Ryan Bradley examines how MIT researchers have developed a new method to control cells by squeezing them. The work, which is being commercialized as a company called SQZ Biotech, was named one of 10 World Changing ideas by Scientific American

Fortune- CNN

Caroline Fairchild of Fortune speaks with Professor Cynthia Brazeal about women and entrepreneurship. “The world would certainly be a better place if we had more women entrepreneurs,” says Breazeal. “Women are going to bring a different angle to startups.”

Fox News

Sam Gardner writes for Fox Sports about the MIT football team’s first undefeated season. “Academics are always going to be the most important thing at this place, but you can excel in other things and be an MIT student,” says Coach Chad Martinovich.

New York Times

Writing for The New York Times, Michael Cooper reports on Prof. Tod Machover’s new work about Detroit, “Symphony in D.” “I look forward to working with Detroiters from all backgrounds to create a collective musical portrait of this exciting moment in the city’s history, when everything is being rethought and anything is possible,” says Machover. 

Scientific American

A new technique developed by MIT researchers for capturing waste heat that can be used to produce electricity has been named one of 10 World Changing ideas by Scientific American, reports Ryan Bradley. “This is something attractive,” says Dr. Yuan Yang, a postdoctoral associate at MIT, “because low-grade heat is everywhere.”

Scientific American

Researchers at MIT and the University of California, Berkeley, have developed a vision-correcting display that modifies the screens of smartphones or tablets to eliminate a user’s need to wear glasses, writes Rachel Nuwer for Scientific American. “The screen can correct for myopia, hyperopia, astigmatism and more complicated vision problems,” she explains.

BostInno

BostInno’s Elise Harmon writes that a $15 million grant from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation to MIT could “help pave the way for a comprehensive cybersecurity policy.” The gift to MIT is part of $45 million in total to MIT, Stanford and UC Berkeley as part of the foundation’s Cyber Initiative.

Forbes

Forbes reporter Susan Adams examines a new study co-authored by MIT Prof. Evan Apfelbaum that looks at how diversity impacts the performance of stock traders. The researchers compared groups of ethnically homogenous and diverse traders and found that “traders in the diverse group did a 58% better job at correctly pricing assets.”

Science

Prof. Robert Langer speaks with Trisha Gura of Science about his work as an engineer and entrepreneur.  Says Langer of how he became an entrepreneur, “I could see that by having these little companies, you could make an enormous impact.”

BetaBoston

MIT’s Daniel Weitzner speaks with BetaBoston’s Nidhi Subbaraman about a new cybersecurity policy initiative supported by the Hewlett Foundation. Weitzner explains that researchers will examine what kind of laws and public policy are needed to make “[technologies] more trustworthy.” 

Boston Globe

Boston Globe reporter Callum Borchers writes about how MIT researchers have developed a new coating that could reduce the risk posed by ingesting batteries. The battery has “been shown in lab tests to deactivate an ingested battery without compromising its performance in electronic devices,” writes Borchers. 

Wired

Klint Finley reports for Wired on Carduino, a device created by MIT graduate student Josh Siegel that allows users to customize their cars. “This tiny device plugs into an automobile diagnostics port, letting you equip your car with all sorts of tools you otherwise couldn’t,” Finley explains. 

Boston Globe

Gov. Deval Patrick posthumously awarded the Trooper George L. Hanna Memorial Award for Bravery to MIT Police Office Sean Collier, reports Alyssa Edes for The Boston Globe. This year’s awards honored 25 police officers from across Massachusetts for their response to the Boston Marathon bombings.

Boston Globe

 “The Age Lab has been studying this issue for more than a decade, with the help of a donated red Volkswagen New Beetle it calls “Miss Daisy” that it turned into a simulator car filled with technologies geared toward testing older drivers,” writes Boston Globe reporter Nidhi Subbaraman of the MIT Age Lab’s work to examine distracted driving. 

Salon

Henry Grabar of Salon writes about MIT graduate student Mariaflavia Harari’s paper examining the influence that a city’s shape has on desirable urban characteristics. Harari found that a city having a circular shape "is a kind of urban amenity, like a subway line or a movie theater, that people will pay for,” Grabar writes.