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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 978

Wired

"Pablo Picasso once declared: 'Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up.'"

CNN Money

"About 20% of American adults who have jobs are earning only $10.65 an hour or less, according to Osterman's analysis. Even at 40 hours a week, that amounts to less than $22,314, the poverty level for a family of four."

Reuters

"Additive manufacturing, also called '3-D printing,' is not an entirely new technology. The technique has been around for two decades, but companies have primarily used it to quickly make prototypes of new products or to produce one-of-a-kind items like custom-fit hearing aids."

Popular Science

"Giving cardiac patients a heart of gold nanowires could ensure engineered tissue works like it should, pulsing in unison to make the heart beat. First growing nanowires and then growing heart cells, engineers from MIT and Harvard University say their new muscle-machine blended heart patch improves on existing cardiac patches, which have trouble reaching a consistent level of conductivity."

Science/AAAS

"President Barack Obama today named seven recipients of the National Medal of Science, and five winners of the National Medal of Technology and Innovation, hailing their 'fearlessness even as they explore the very frontiers of human knowledge.'"

The Wall Street Journal

"Peter Diamond, who won the 2010 Nobel prize in economics but ultimately abandoned a bid to serve on the Federal Reserve, talks with WSJ's Kelly Evans about why he supports 'Operation Twist,' and why more fiscal stimulus is need to fix the U.S. jobs problem."

Boston.com

"(Rudolf) Jaenisch, also a biology professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is one of seven scientists to be awarded the medal, for his work on stem cells and the understanding of epigenetics -- the molecular mechanisms by which traits can be passed down to future generations without changes to DNA."

NPR

"A lot of decisions about the 2012 elections are being made today. How many voting machines are needed? Where should polling places be located? How many poll workers have to be hired?"

New Scientist

"Habits may be difficult to change, but now at least we have an insight into how they form."

CNN Money

"The president's tone was a marked departure from his usual, cool-headed demeanor. He sounded combative, and people noticed."

Wired

"At Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale’s Laboratory of Intelligence Systems in Lausanne, Sabine Hauert, Severin Leven and Dario Floreano have found a way to make small, fixed-wing machines fly together, migrate and avoid crashing."

The Huffington Post

"Of course, MIT has another monster jewel: its Media Lab."

Boston.com

"President Obama today recognized 94 researchers with the Presidential Early Career Awards for Scientists and Engineers."

BBC News

"Abalone shells have inspired Professor Belcher's work for more than two decades and brought her to the pinnacle of science. And they have implications for the future of manufacturing, green energy, medicine and science - just for starters."

New Scientist

"Even a cancer gene may have a good side. A study of people with African ancestry has revealed that a gene associated with cancer shows a pattern of variability that suggests it benefits carriers."