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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 992

BBC News

"Jose Gomez-Marquez has taken an unusual approach to making medical devices for the developing world. Rather than stripping down complex medical equipment, he uses toy guns and Lego."

Popular Science

"Giving voice to the voiceless, a team of Harvard and MIT researchers have developed a synthetic, injectable material that can be implanted into scarred vocal cords to restore their function."

Forbes India

"Abhijit Banerjee, an MIT professor, is ironic, thoughtful and deliberate, ready to cast a cold eye on social issues such as health, education and poverty."

Reuters

"According to Shah, the kind of star rating systems that are the status quo on the web today are flawed because, well, humans are flawed."

The Washington Post

"So we’re teaching the computers how to advance their own interests via global warfare, now. Nice knowing you, fellow humans."

TIME

"...it's now possible to print photovoltaic cells on paper almost as you would a document — and almost as cheaply too."

Boston.com

"The Museum of Fine Arts has reinstated its award for local women artists and increased the cash amount that goes with it as preparations continue for the opening of the museum’s new wing for contemporary art."

Scientific American

"But mice implanted with miniature human livers can mimic the ways in which the human body breaks down chemical compounds, to help spot potential problems before drugs are tested in humans."

NPR

"Hoffman says that if NASA were starting from scratch today, the shuttle would be entirely different."

Economist

"How do businesses co-ordinate the flow of material from suppliers to factories to customers? How do they decide what to produce within their factory? How do airlines schedule their complex systems, or theme parks manage queues? How do hospitals plan capacity and schedule their beds?"

Boston.com

"David is no ivory towered professor who studies bicycling from the safety of the classroom. Although he’s 83 years old, David still rides eight miles from his home in Winchester to his office at M.I.T. several days a week."

The Huffington Post

"This is not the first time scientists have created 'humanized' mice, but this method is the first to show real promise and produce consistently healthy mice."

The Boston Globe

"The device can be used to treat a range of illnesses, including multiple sclerosis, cancer, and hepatitis C, according to a patent the company filed with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where the technology was developed."

Guardian

"They place two or more people in a form of relationship not created by any other apparatus for the movement of bodies through space."--James Buzard, MIT

CNBC

"MIT professor Huang Yasheng argues that Chinese incomes are not rising fast enough to offset dwindling export growth and that urbanization has been wasteful."