Engineers report a major advance in creating a new family of semiconductor materials
Ultrastable and made of inexpensive, nontoxic elements, chalcogenide perovskites could find applications in solar cells, lighting, and more.
Ultrastable and made of inexpensive, nontoxic elements, chalcogenide perovskites could find applications in solar cells, lighting, and more.
The Common Ground for Computing Education is facilitating collaborations to develop new classes for students to pursue computational knowledge within the context of their fields of interest.
A new method forces a machine learning model to focus on more data when learning a task, which leads to more reliable predictions.
Researchers decipher when and why immune cells fail to respond to immunotherapy, and suggest that T cells need a different kind of prodding in order to re-engage the immune response.
A National Science Foundation-funded team will use artificial intelligence to speed up discoveries in physics, astronomy, and neuroscience.
Comparison of four oxidation-based cleaners suggests the devices produce their own pollutants and vary in effectiveness.
Now in its 19th year, the WTP brings high school students with little STEM experience to Cambridge for an immersive, four-week exploration of all things engineering.
The prevalence of auditory symptoms in Covid-19 patients is unknown, but infection of the inner ears may be responsible for hearing and balance problems.
Senior Brian Williams has used bioengineering as a launchpad to combat racism in public health — and he doesn’t want to stop there.
MIT researchers develop a new way to control and measure energy levels in a diamond crystal; could improve qubits in quantum computers.
A new RNA-based control switch could be used to trigger production of therapeutic proteins to treat cancer or other diseases.
A visual analytics tool helps child welfare specialists understand machine learning predictions that can assist them in screening cases.
Awards support research to improve the efficiency, scalability, and adoption of clean energy technologies.
“A Shot in the Arm,” a new book from Professor Yossi Sheffi, reveals lessons about overcoming global threats.