MIT’s Love Lab developing a Covid-19 vaccine to potentially reach billions
Manufacturability is key to producing a widely available, affordable vaccine.
Manufacturability is key to producing a widely available, affordable vaccine.
Study finds specific cells in the lungs, nasal passages, and intestines that are more susceptible to infection.
MIT senior helps his immigrant family address medical matters while balancing his school work.
CSAIL director and MIT Schwarzman College of Computing deputy dean of research will serve on the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology.
IEEE, SPIE, and OSA will support students within a new program launched in collaboration with MIT’s Initiative for Knowledge and Innovation in Manufacturing.
An ad hoc team of engineers and doctors has developed a low-cost, open-source alternative, now ready for rapid production.
Ezra Zuckerman Sivan, Jinhua Zhao, and Kamal Youcef-Toumi honored as “Committed to Caring.”
Chemical engineer aims to create a test that can work in 10 minutes and doesn’t require specialized instruments or laboratory infrastructure.
Startup Posh has created chatbots that use “conversational memory” to have more natural exchanges.
A machine learning algorithm combines data on the disease's spread with a neural network, to help predict when infections will slow down in each country.
Carbon nanotubes embedded in leaves detect chemical signals that are produced when a plant is damaged.
The $90,000 merit-based fellowship funds graduate studies for outstanding immigrants and children of immigrants.
Materials scientist explores why some household cleaners could harm the protective coating on a smartphone screen.
Using magnetic nanoparticles, scientists stimulate the adrenal gland in rodents to control release of hormones linked to stress.
Nuclear scientists and biomedical researchers team up to investigate whether treatment with gamma radiation could make N95 masks more reusable.