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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 789

Forbes

Robert J. Szczerba of Forbes reports on how cameras are changing health care, featuring new work from researchers at the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab. The researchers are developing a new technique to measure heart rate via subtle head movements, Szczerba writes. 

Forbes

Forbes reporter Bill Tucker writes about battery innovation, highlighting a liquid battery system developed by MIT researchers. The proposed system would operate at dramatically lower temperatures and would allow renewable energy sources to compete with conventional power plants, reports Tucker. 

The Guardian

The Guardian reports on the new study from a team of MIT engineers examining the Mars One colonization plans. The team found that plans to grow crops in the settlers’ habitat would produce unsafe levels of oxygen, creating a fire risk. 

The Wall Street Journal

MIT Age Lab Director Joseph Coughlin writes for The Wall Street Journal about some of the potential pitfalls of early retirement. “[B]efore you retire, do some careful planning that goes well beyond financial security,” writes Coughlin. “What will you be pursuing to give you a daily sense of purpose?”

BetaBoston

Nidhi Subbaraman writes for BetaBoston about the MIT startup Embr Labs and its product, a thermoelectric bracelet called Wristify. Wristify allows for precise temperature control, giving wearers the ability to determine exactly how warm or cool they want to be.

WBUR

Professor Erik Brynjolfsson speaks with Tom Ashbrook of WBUR’s On Point about how automation will impact the labor market. “If you look at wage’s you’ll see they’re falling,” said Brynjolfsson. “That tells us that there is not enough demand for people working in those middle-skilled jobs.”

Wired

"The idea here is to take existing material systems like fibres, sheets, strands and three-dimensional objects and program them to change shape and property on demand," says Skylar Tibbits, director of the Self Assembly Lab of his group’s new materials that can be programmed to transform autonomously. 

HuffPost

The Huffington Post reports on how MIT researchers have developed a robotic cheetah that can run and jump, untethered. 

CNBC

Hailey Lee of CNBC examines a new study co-authored by Dr. Sara Ellison, which found that gender diversity in the workplace increased productivity. The study shows that "companies really need to start considering whether introducing more diversity could in fact benefit their bottom line in ways they may not be able to predict or understand," says Ellison. 

LA Times

Los Angeles Times reporter Deborah Netburn writes about how MIT engineers have analyzed the feasibility of the Mars One colonization plans. "The claim they make is that no new technology is required for their mission," says graduate student Syndey Do. "Our numbers show that is not feasible."

The Chronicle of Higher Education

Professor Alex Pentland writes for The Chronicle of Higher Education about how researchers can produce important social insights by analyzing aggregated anonymous data. “Today the new technology of living labs is beginning to give researchers a more complete view of life in all its complexity. It is, I believe, the future of social science,” writes Pentland. 

Boston Globe

An anonymous donor gave $2.5 million to illuminate the Harvard Bridge stretching across the Charles River from Boston to the MIT campus, writes Nestor Ramos for The Boston Globe. The distance between light poles will be measured in Smoots, a unit of measurement created by MIT student Oliver Smoot in 1958.

Associated Press

The Associated Press writes about MIT alumnus and visiting professor Jean Tirole, who was awarded this year’s Nobel Prize in Economics. MIT Professor Bengt Holmstrom, who collaborated on a book with Tirole, says he is "committed to bettering the world."

Boston Globe

Boston Globe reporter Jack Newsham writes about Jean Tirole, the recipient of the 2014 Nobel Prize in Economics and an MIT alumnus. Tirole, who holds the title of visiting professor at MIT, was honored for his studies of market power and regulation. 

Associated Press

Associated Press reporters Karl Ritter and Nathalie Rothchild write about Jean Tirole, an MIT alumnus and former faculty member who was awarded the 2014 Nobel Prize in Economics. "What’s been great about much of Jean’s work is that he’ll start with a problem that people are struggling with,” said Professor Nancy Rose of Tirole’s work.