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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 983

Bloomberg

"Central bankers should take food prices into account in setting policy and targeting inflation, said Roberto Rigobon, an economics professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Management."

Financial Times

“People were pretty resilient” after 9/11, says MIT logistics professor Yossi Sheffi, author of a 2005 book on disaster preparedness. “The seminal event was Y2K.”

TIME

"At the MIT Biomechatronics lab, professor Hugh Herr is creating robotic prosthetics that mimic the functions of real limbs, leading to a new bionic age."

CNN Money

"Because hedge funds are expected and incentivized to take on a broad variety of risks, they can get killed during bad times from market turmoil and dislocation." - MIT's Andrew Lo

The New York Times

"In their new book, 'Good Jobs America: Making Work Better for Everyone,' Paul Osterman (of MIT) and Beth Shulman argue that the United States needs to worry about not just creating millions more jobs but also ensuring that the jobs are good ones."

Popular Science

"NASA is going back to the moon once again, sending a pair of spacecraft on a quest to learn the origins of our closest companion by studying its interior and its gravitational field."

Reuters

"More than 100 spacecraft have been to the moon, including six with U.S. astronauts, but one key piece of information about Earth's natural satellite is still missing -- what's inside."

New Scientist

"Modern technology is dotted throughout the gallery - from the space suit designed by MIT aeronautical engineer Dava Newman to a pair of hexapod robots."

The Washington Post

“You don’t take your shoes off anywhere but in the U.S. — not in Israel, in Amsterdam, in London,” said Yossi Sheffi, an Israeli-born expert on risk analysis at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “We all know why we do it here, but this seems to be a make-everybody-feel-good thing rather than a necessity.”

Boston.com

"Business groups and organized labor have at least one thing in common right now: a frustration that our politics are producing more hot rhetoric than good jobs, even as crucial national needs go unaddressed." -MIT's Thomas A. Kochan

Boston Herald

“'Traffic signals are one of the least-efficient parts of the transportation system, so we decided to see if we could leverage smartphones to improve the flow of vehicles through them,' said Emmanouil Koukoumidis, a 28-year-old Massachusetts Institute of Technology visiting researcher who led the project."

The New York Times

"On Thursday, President Obama will deliver a major speech on America’s employment crisis. But too often, what is lost in the call for job creation is a clear idea of what jobs we want to create." -MIT's Paul Osterman

The Huffington Post

"Four decades after landing men on the moon, NASA is returning to Earth's orbiting companion, this time with a set of robotic twins that will measure lunar gravity while chasing one another in circles."

New Scientist

"It is an idea any overworked teacher would welcome - computers that automatically mark piles of exams and homework."

The Wall Street Journal

"In other words, at the lab bench, just about any virus will get the death sentence from Draco—from the petty rhinovirus that causes the common cold to the homicidal dengue fever."