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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 843

Boston Globe

“Artist and MIT professor emerita Joan Jonas, 77, has been chosen to represent the United States at the 56th Venice Biennale, the world’s most prestigious exhibition of contemporary art,” writes Sebastian Smee of The Boston Globe. Jonas is considered a pioneer in performance and video art.

The Atlantic

Atlantic reporter Todd Woody writes about how MIT researchers have developed a way to store solar energy in molecules. The energy inside the molecules can be stored forever and endlessly re-used so that solar power can be accessed even when the sun is not shining, Woody explains. 

Boston 25 News

Maria Stephanos of FOX 25 speaks with members of the MIT Strong running team about why they are running in this year’s Boston Marathon. “It’s a really excellent way to show support for the MIT community,” says runner and MIT graduate Jenn Gagner.

New York Times

New York Times reporter Carol Vogel writes that Professor Emerita Joan Jonas has been selected to represent the United States at the 2015 Venice Biennale. Paul C. Ha, director of the MIT List Visual Arts Center, nominated Jonas and will serve as commissioner of the exhibit.   

Wired

Liz Stinson of Wired reports on Transform, a piece of shape-shifting furniture built by the Tangible Media Group at the MIT Media Lab that metamorphoses based on the motion and emotion of the people around it. Transform is comprised of 1,152 plastic pins controlled by microprocessors that sit underneath.

Forbes

Writing for Forbes, Leo King reports that an autonomous robotic submarine developed by MIT startup Bluefin Robotics is being deployed in the search for Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370.

Wired

MIT researchers have developed a technique that allows nanocrystals to distinguish between genuine and counterfeit goods, reports Wired reporter Liat Clark. The research could have applications in the sale of luxury goods and electronics, as well as vaccine quality control.

Boston.com

Boston.com reporter Matt Rocheleau reports on how Professor Jeffrey Grossman and postdoctoral associate Timothy Kucharski have developed a new material that can produce solar power for times when the sun is not shining.

Boston Globe

Dennis Keohane of The Boston Globe writes about the recipients of this year’s Lemelson-MIT National Collegiate Student Prize Competition.

PBS

The PBS NewsHour reports on how experts from MIT, Harvard and Columbia have determined that a fragment of papyrus known as the “Gospel of Jesus’s Wife” is a relic from ancient times and not a forgery.

Washington Post

Professor M. Taylor Fravel co-authors this Washington Post article looking at the frequency of Chinese Coast Guard patrols in the territorial waters off the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands. Fravel and his co-author suggest that the decrease in patrols may signal a willingness by China to avoid escalation in a standoff with Japan over the islands.

New York Times

Professor Max Tegmark writes for The New York Times about recent research that appears to support the theory of cosmic inflation, and the implications of this discovery for the study of physics and the origins of the universe.

Scientific American

“Swager used infrared spectroscopy, which analyzes the low-frequency light from an object, to see if the ink showed any inconsistencies or variations that would suggest it was a recent forgery,” reports Scientific American’s Marc Lallanilla about new research from MIT, Harvard and Columbia showing the “Gospel of Jesus’s Wife” is authentic.

Scientific American

Reporting for Scientific American, Seth Fletcher writes about a new effort, led by MIT’s Shep Doeleman, to coordinate radio telescopes around the world to create a telescope powerful enough to get a picture of the black hole at the center of the Milky Way.

The Guardian

Guardian reporter Meeri Kim highlights new MIT research that shows that in order to manage the world’s visual chaos, the human brain performs automatic visual smoothing over time and our visual perception is influenced by what we saw up to 15 seconds ago.