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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 845

NBC

John Roach reports for NBC News that graduate student David Sengeh was selected as a recipient of the 2014 Lemelson-MIT National Collegiate Student Prize Competition. Sengeh was selected for his work on an innovative socket that makes prosthetic limbs more comfortable and functional for amputees.

Boston Herald

“A new study from MIT that could change the way building ventilation systems are designed found that the germs stay airborne in gas clouds, spreading the droplets throughout an entire room,” writes Boston Herald reporter Jordan Graham of the MIT study on coughing and sneezing.

Scientific American

Umair Irfan and ClimateWire report on new research that helps explain how lithium batteries operate. The findings could lead to new methods for optimizing battery performance.

Nature

In an article published on Nature, Clara Moskovitz reports on the discovery of gamma rays shining from the center of the Milky Way, which researchers believe might be the first indirect detection of the particles that cause dark matter.

Boston Magazine

“In a new study, published in the Journal of Fluid Mechanics, researchers report that coughs and sneezes have “associated gas clouds that keep their potentially infectious droplets aloft over much greater distances than previously realized”,” writes Boston Magazine reporter Melissa Malamut about a new MIT on how coughs and sneezes spread disease.

Boston Magazine

Boston Magazine’s Steve Annear writes about how Social Computing Group researchers at the MIT Media Lab are mapping all bicycle accidents in Cambridge from 2010-2013. The group hopes the interactive map will help alert cyclists and the city of potentially dangerous sections.

Boston Globe

Boston Globe reporter Deborah Kotz highlights research from Professor John Bush and Professor Lydia Bourouiba that shows virus droplets expelled through a cough or sneeze travel five to 200 times farther than they would as individual particles.

HuffPost

Catherine Taibi of The Huffington Post previews an Anderson Cooper documentary in which he follows the recovery of Boston Marathon bombing survivor Adrianne Haslet-Davis. Haslet-Davis has regained her ability to dance thanks to a bionic leg designed by Hugh Herr of the MIT Media Lab.

NECN

NECN’s Josh Brogadir speaks with members of the MIT Police Department about Officer Sean Collier. “He was a pleasure. You always knew Sean had your back and you had Sean's back,” said Patrolman Bill Smith during the segment.

Boston Globe

Hiawatha Bray of The Boston Globe reports on research underway at MIT to develop robots that will be able to take the place of human first responders in disaster relief operations.

Boston Globe

Bryan Maquard of The Boston Globe looks back at the life of Carl Accardo, former director of Asian operations for the MIT Industrial Liaison Program. Accardo, who created a network of research exchanges between MIT and Japanese companies, passed away on Mar. 22 at the age of 85.

Space.com

Space.com reporter Mike Wall explains new research findings that might help explain the nature of dark matter. “In the future we might well look back and say this was where we saw dark matter annihilation for the first time," Professor Tracy Slatyer is quoted as saying in the article.

Washington Post

Writing for The Washington Post, Emily Badger reports on an AgeLab study that showed that using more legible typefaces in in-car media, like GPS systems, could reduce distracted driving.

The Washington Post

Washington Post reporter Meeri Kim writes about a new MIT study that shows the human brain performs automatic visual smoothing when processing information. In particular, researchers found that our visual perception is influenced by what we saw up to 15 seconds ago.

Scientific American

Cynthia Graber reports for Scientific American about the robotic clam developed by MIT researchers that can mimic the digging capabilities of the Atlantic razor clam.