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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 402

CBS Boston

MIT researchers have developed a new treatment that could help ease the pain caused by passing kidney stones, reports CBS Boston. The researchers found that “delivering a combination of two muscle relaxants directly to the ureter, the tube that connects the kidneys and bladder, can make passage faster and less painful.”

Fast Company

Fast Company reporter Kristin Toussaint writes that researchers from MIT and Climate Interactive have created a climate change simulator that allows users to craft their own climate policy. The simulator can help “people from any background understand the climate challenge that we’re facing,” explains Prof. John Sterman.

Axios

MIT and Climate Interactive have developed a climate-change simulator that “is the first of its kind designed for politicians and others who care about climate change and energy, but aren’t researchers accustomed to arcane models,” reports Naema Ahmed and Amy Harder for Axios. “It shows how your choices affect annual greenhouse gas emissions, global temperature rise and energy costs over the next 80 years.”

Financial Times

A new working paper co-authored by MIT researchers finds that federal investment in R&D leads to increased private sector R&D spending, reports Jamie Powell for the Financial Times.

Quartz

Quartz reporter Sarah Scoles spotlights research scientist Christopher Carr’s work developing “autonomous tools that could someday travel to Mars, collect samples, extract their genetic material, and sequence it—no humans required.”

The Wall Street Journal

Prof. Simon Johnson writes for The Wall Street Journal about the impact of health care plans on American businesses and entrepreneurs, and examines Senator Elizabeth Warren’s health care proposal. Johnson notes that, “if health-care costs continue to grow unchecked, America’s businesses will be ruined.”

NPR

MIT students Phoebe Li and Amber VanHemel speak with NPR’s Lulu Garcia-Navarro about their quest to set a new world record for the longest hot dog toss and catch. “We found the easiest way to throw the hot dog was to throw at end over end so that it would kind of just spin like a Ferris wheel towards Amber,” says Li.

USA Today

Writing for USA Today, senior lecturer Sharmila C. Chatterjee explores how brick-and-mortar stores can compete with online retailers. “As long as brick-and-mortar retailers play to their strengths by integrating with online, developing creative partnerships, and providing customers with stimulation, meaningful human interactions, and unique offerings, there is room for both to thrive,” Chatterjee writes.

Nature

Nature reporter Ewen Callaway spotlights a study by MT researchers that finds scooped papers receive only a quarter fewer citations than papers that were the first to report the same discovery. “You get a meaningful advantage for being first, but being scooped may not be as devastating as people seem to fear,” says graduate student Carolyn Stein.

The Wall Street Journal

Writing for The Wall Street Journal, research scientist Matthias Winkenbach explores the feasibility of using drones for package delivery. “Many demonstration and research projects around the world have shown the technology behind drone delivery can work,” writes Winkenbach. “Only economic and regulatory reality—rather than hype fueled by the venture-capital world—will determine whether it is commercially viable.”

TechCrunch

TechCrunch reporter Devin Coldewey writes that MIT researchers have developed a new robotic platform that can perform experimental trials numerous times. Coldewey explains that the platform can not only perform an experiment, but can also “intelligently observe the results, change the setup accordingly to pursue further information, and continue doing that until it has something worth reporting.”

Symmetry

Symmetry Magazine spotlights the work of Prof. Kerstin Perez, what inspired her to become a physicist and her favorite part of the experimental process. "I like building things with a small group of people who are all trying to get something to work,” she says. “I find that really exciting.”

Boston Globe

Boston Globe reporter Steve Annear spotlights MIT students Phoebe Li and Amber VanHemel and their mission to set a new Guinness World Record for the world’s longest hot dog toss. “I definitely have a knack for weird things,” says VanHamel of the inspiration for this feat. “The more random the better.”

Inverse

Inverse reporter Mike Brown writes that MIT researchers have developed a new transparent coating for solar panels that improves electrical conductivity. “The ability of our vapor deposited conducting polymer layers to integrate into next-generation light-weight solar cells has the potential to simplify the roof top installation process,” explains Prof. Karen Gleason.

Motherboard

Motherboard reporter DJ Pangburn writes that a new immersive interactive art exhibit developed by MIT’s Center for Advanced Virtuality shows a deepfake video of President Richard Nixon delivering an alternate moon landing speech. “Rather than exploring deepfakes within the context of current news, the team was thinking about what it meant to retroactively rewrite a past event,” writes Pangburn.