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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 385

The Wall Street Journal

Writing for The Wall Street Journal, Prof. Yossi Sheffi explores how companies can prepare to recover following the Covid-19 pandemic. “For supply-chain managers, the task is to keep critical suppliers viable and to treat customers in ways that do not create resentment,” writes Sheffi. “Companies that achieve this balance should come out strong on the other side.”

New Scientist

Research specialist Kate Darling speaks with New Scientist about why people form emotional attachments to robots. “We are very social creatures and we tend to subconsciously treat robots like they are alive, even though we know they are just machines,” says Darling. “Part of this comes from our tendency to anthropomorphise, i.e. to project human traits, motivations and behaviours onto non-humans.”

STAT

For the 10th year, the Koch Institute is featuring a selection of bioscience images as part its annual Image Awards. “Sometimes the most beautiful images are ones that can’t be seen with the naked eye,” writes STAT.

Forbes

Joseph Coughlin, director of the AgeLab, writes for Forbes about how social distancing aimed at curbing the spread of Covid-19 is shedding light on the social isolation that many seniors experience. Coughlin writes that social distancing “can serve as an exercise in empathy (albeit an imperfect one), permitting younger people to appreciate some of what many older adults go through every day.”

Popular Mechanics

A new app created by MIT researchers helps maps the spread of Covid-19 by tracking a person’s location and interactions, reports Courtney Linder for Popular Mechanics. The data, which is encrypted to protect user privacy, “lets you know if you've likely come into contact with a person who has tested positive for COVID-19.”

Financial Times

Financial Times reporter Chris Nuttall spotlights how MIT researchers have developed a new app that aims to help curb the spread of Covid-19 by tracking “where you have been and who you have crossed paths with — and then shares this personal data with other users in a privacy-preserving way.”

Scientific American

Scientific American Ron Cowen explores Prof. Markus Buehler’s work generating music that represents the vibrations and folding patterns of amino acids. “Just like in a painting, the new protein sounds are like a new color palette that could be invented—colors no one has ever seen—but which can now be used to create art,” Buehler says. 

Fast Company

Fast Company reporter Mark Wilson spotlights how Tangible Media Group researchers have developed interactive systems that could allow people in separate locations to physically interact with the same object. “You could literally play catch with someone through inFORM, tossing a ball into their hands,” writes Wilson.

Popular Science

Popular Science spotlights the Koch Institute’s Image Awards, which aims to highlight visuals produced through life science and biomedical research at MIT. “The array of photos on cancer and brain research strike a chord, effectively demonstrating the biggest challengesand possibilitiesin understanding how life works.”

WBUR

Writing for WBUR, MIT graduate student Nicole Bustos argues that the U.S. should make diagnostic testing, treatments and vaccines for Covid-19 free. “A federal directive requiring free access to diagnostic tests, treatment and the eventual vaccine will reduce the spread of the virus within communities,” writes Bustos and her co-authors.

WBUR

WBUR’s Barbara Moran reports that the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard is working with state officials to begin processing Covid-19 diagnostic tests. Moran notes that Broad scientists have been working to adapt the Institute's clinical testing facility “to accurately perform the existing COVID-19 test on a large scale.”

New York Times

To slow the spread of Covid-19, the presidents of MIT, Harvard and Stanford argue for big institutional actions, even some that feel uncomfortably extreme: “Public health experts tell us that as a society, the steps we take this week will have an immense impact on determining whether this crisis becomes a catastrophe.”

The Wall Street Journal

Looking for educational and entertaining screen-time options for kids who are currently at home due to school closures caused by the spread of Covid-19? Wall Street Journal reporter Ellen Gamerman recommends Scratch - a free programming language developed by MIT researchers that allows children to program their own interactive stories, games and animations.

BBC News

BBC News reporter Corinne Purtill writes that a new study by MIT researchers finds that workers with niche skills often end up earning more than their peers. The researchers found that, “even within roles with the same job title, employees who managed to stake claim to specific job tasks unique to the organisation typically had an advantage in pay.”

The Wall Street Journal

Wall Street Journal reporter Steven Rosenberg spotlights MIT startup XtalPi, a pharmaceutical-technology company using AI technologies to identify potential vaccines and treatments for Covid-19. “Since the outbreak, XtalPi has used its platform to study the virus at the molecular level to assess potential mutations that can make the virus more likely to spread or harder to fight off,” writes Rosenberg.