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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 897

Boston Herald

"Smartphones are blamed for distracted driving and roadway tragedies, but could wireless technology also hold the key to safer highways?"

The Wall Street Journal

"Some of the MIT Media Lab’s most groundbreaking research has the potential to transform business as we know it."

The Boston Globe

"'The unique thing about the center is it allows you to think about wireless systems holistically,' said Dina Katabi, professor of electrical engineering and computer science and co-director of the center."

NBC News

"Vesta, the brightest asteroid in the solar system, apparently possessed a magnetic field in its infancy that shielded it from the ravages of energetic particles from the sun, researchers say."

Scientific American

"When does the quantum world give way to the physics of everyday life?"

NPR's On Point

"The IMF warns the danger of a new global slowdown – another recession – is 'alarmingly high.'"

USA Today

"Three novelists who've gained literary respect as well as commercial success — Junot Diaz, (This is How You Lose Her), Louise Erdrich (The Round House) and Dave Eggers (A Hologram for the King) — are among the finalists for the National Book Award for fiction announced Wednesday."

Nature News

"Chris Voigt opens a glass case and delicately lifts a chocolate brown seashell covered with a naturally occurring pattern of uniform white triangles. 'From a very simple set of genetic instructions, you get a very complex pattern, see?'"

BBC News

"Chemists have created a pencil-shaped device which can draw tiny sensors onto a sheet of paper that detect harmful gases."

U.S. News & World Report

"A mathematical model for decay rates in leaves could help lead to better predictions for climate change, scientists report."

The Huffington Post

"This year, Time reports, a note was included challenging incoming MIT students to 'hack the tube' and submit results to the admissions department."

The Wall Street Journal

"A small hair-care company called Living Proof, based on science from MIT, has signed Jennifer Aniston as an investor and spokesperson in an attempt to make waves in the $10 billion hair-care industry."

WBUR's Radio Boston

"The Great Recession may lead many to doubt the notion that markets can do much social good. But not MIT professor Andrew Lo."

The Boston Globe

"Today, the iconic, 150-foot-high dome at the center of MIT’s campus may be known for the creative things the school’s crafty students have hoisted up onto it, but the 'Great Dome' has always served as a symbol of the school’s spirit of innovation."

Wired

"Researchers at the SENSEable City Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology visualised the health records of seven million patients in the US, seeking connections and clusters between diseases."