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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 367

Popular Mechanics

Popular Mechanics reporter Courtney Linder writes that MIT researchers have developed a “brain-on-a-chip” that brings togethers thousands of artificial brain synapses. “The goal is to produce tiny devices that can pack the punch of artificial intelligence, locally, without having to connect to the cloud, or rely on a supercomputer,” writes Linder.

CNN

CNN reporter Jen Christensen highlights a study by MIT researchers that analyses the risks and benefits of reopening different types of locations and businesses. The researchers performed a “cost benefit analysis of 26 different location types to determine what the tradeoff would be between someone's relative risk of getting infected during a visit and the importance of that establishment.”

Eco-Business

Eco-Business reporter Neo Chai Chin writes that a new study by MIT researchers finds that large areas of Southeast Asia’s peatlands are subsiding. “The extensive damage has worrying implications for carbon emissions because peatlands—wetlands made up of organic decomposing matter—are rich stores of carbon.”

The Verge

Verge reporter Nick Statt notes that, “Much of the foundational work showing the flaws of modern facial recognition tech with regard to racial bias is thanks to Joy Buolamwini, a researcher at the MIT Media Lab, and Timnit Gebru, a member at Microsoft Research.”

Quartz

Quartz reporter Nicolas Rivero notes that IBM’s decision to end its facial recognition program was inspired by “one influential piece of research: the Gender Shades project, from MIT Media Lab’s Joy Buolamwini and Microsoft Research’s Timnit Gebru.” Buolamwini and Gebru found that “commercial facial recognition software was significantly less accurate for darker-skinned women than for lighter-skinned men. “

Quartz

Prof. Danielle Wood discusses her research aimed at providing equal access to the benefits of space exploration. “Our team has been doing research that addresses racial inequity,” says Wood. “You don’t have to leave aerospace to be confident you’re working against injustice, but you do have to change the way you’re doing the aerospace work.”

Popular Mechanics

Popular Mechanics reporter Caroline Delbert writes that a study by MIT researchers finds that solar geoengineering efforts aimed at cooling the planet would change extratropical storm tracks. “The scientists discovered an amount of aerosol coverage required to offset that much more carbon dioxide would alter the storm tracks in both hemispheres and around the world,” says Delbert.

TechCrunch

MIT researchers have developed a chip that brings together thousands of artificial brain synapses and could help enable small, portable AL devices, reports Darrell Etherington for TechCrunch. “The results could help create devices that can handle complex AI computing locally, while remaining small and power-efficient, and without having to connect to a data center,” writes Etherington.

Reuters

Reuters reporter Howard Schneifer highlights Prof. Jeffrey Harris’ new working paper, which finds that the main methods for tracking the spread of Covid-19 have all failed in certain areas. “We will have more than a few problems trying to determine whether various state governments’ efforts to rekindle economic and social activity have been working or failing,” Harris wrote. 

New York Times

A new working paper co-authored by MIT researchers finds that an online voting platform “could, in certain cases, be manipulated to alter votes — without being detected by the voter, election officials or the company that owns it,” reports David Singer, Nicole Perlroth and Matthew Rosenberg for The New York Times.

New York Times

New York Times reporter Neil Irwin spotlights a new working paper co-authored by Prof. Iván Werning examining the macroeconomic implications of the Covid-19 pandemic, in particular whether negative supply shocks can affect demand. “Demand is interrelated with supply,” says Werning. “It’s not a separate concept.”

CBS Boston

Alumna and author Christine Taylor-Butler '81 speaks with CBS Boston about the importance of children’s books in confronting racism. “If we can start flooding these kids with 20 books that are positive images of people who are African American and LatinX and Native Americans, [they] start to go ‘Wow, those kids are just like me,’” says Taylor-Butler.

Boston Globe

During a Boston Globe virtual roundtable, Paul Ha, director of the MIT List Visual Arts Center, spoke about how museums are being reimagined as they plan to reopen during the Covid-19 pandemic. Of MIT’s Student Art Lending Program, Ha notes that they try to ensure that, “for every student who walks in wanting a real piece of art, that they themselves are represented in the collection.”

TechCrunch

In an article for TechCrunch, Andy Moss, Connor Spelliscy and John Borthwick highlight several tools developed by MIT researchers to help tackle the Covid-19 pandemic.

STAT

Researchers from MIT and Brigham and Women’s Hospital have created a system that allows two patients to share one ventilator. Postdoc Shriya Srinivasan explains the system has "individual channels for each patient, but has controls on them such that you can deliver the appropriate volumes and pressures that each patient needs.”