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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 925

Nature

"David Jewitt, at the University of California, Los Angeles, and Jane Luu, at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, US, share the astronomy prize for their 'discovery and characterization of trans-Neptunian bodies' — objects in the outer reaches of the Solar System, such as the chilly and mysterious Quaoar."

Wired

"'We finally have the tools to watch how bacteria behave in the ocean, which still kind of blows my mind,' said Melissa Garren, a marine microbiologist at MIT."

The Chronicle of Higher Education

"MIT recently resurrected App Inventor and expanded it with particular attention to educational use, and the new hub for the tool includes the beginnings of a section of resources aimed at teachers."

WBUR's Radio Boston

"Big data processing and storage has the potential to add an estimated 15,000 jobs to the local economy over the next few years, which is why this new initiative MIT has unveiled, called bigdata@CSAIL, is so important."

The Wall Street Journal

"At the recent news conference announcing edX, a $60 million Harvard-MIT partnership in online education, university leaders spoke of reaching millions of new students in India, China and around the globe. They talked of the 'revolutionary' potential of online learning, hailing it as the 'single biggest change in education since the printing press.'"

The Economist

"It would be a blessing, then, if needles could be done away with and drugs introduced into the body in some other way. And that is exactly what Ian Hunter, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), is proposing."

New Scientist

"needleless device that jets medicine through the skin could bring an end to painful injections. It could also provide developing countries with a way to deliver powdered drugs, which do not require refrigeration."

TIME

"Beware of your smile: it may betray you. Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have developed a way to discern the sincerity—and level of frustration—associated with your grin."

USA Today

"What makes Sal's videos particularly engaging is just his personality," Agarwal says. "It's his voice. You feel like he's there next to you, explaining things."

The Wall Street Journal

"Research offers little support for the idea that listening to music improves concentration, says Robert Desimone, director of the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT."

The Boston Globe

"A team of students from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Rhode Island School of Design believe they have created a way to help urban parents get around more efficiently, building a stroller and harness system called BuzzyBaby, which they hope to sell by next spring."

CNN

"Three days after embattled Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chairman Gregory Jaczko announced his resignation, the White House announced President Barack Obama intends to nominate (MIT alum) Allison Macfarlane, a professor at George Mason University, to the agency's top post."

The Huffington Post

"Hamlet may have been able to see through a fake smile, but it's hard for most of us. People smile out of politeness, awkwardness or frustration, so how can we tell if a smile is real?"

NPR

"The needle and syringe are icons of modern medicine. But a device developed at MIT to squirt medicines quickly and pretty much painlessly through the skin suggests that the future of medicine could be needle-free."

NPR

"Did you know most people smile when they are frustrated?"