3Q: Aleksander Madry on building trustworthy artificial intelligence
A recent MIT symposium explores methods for making artificial intelligence systems more reliable, secure, and transparent.
A recent MIT symposium explores methods for making artificial intelligence systems more reliable, secure, and transparent.
Faculty researchers share insights into new capabilities at the annual Industrial Liaison Program Research and Development Conference.
Platform offers the precision that shoebox-sized CubeSats need to beam down hefty data packets.
It’s not quite the Ant-Man suit, but the system produces 3-D structures one thousandth the size of the originals.
Electronic pill can relay diagnostic information or release drugs in response to smartphone commands.
Method could illuminate features of biological tissues in low-exposure images.
With water-rescue devices, injury-preventing knives, and more, students launch products that make the world a little safer.
High-temperature steam might be used in remote regions to cook, clean, or sterilize medical equipment.
High-power, tunable design could be used for chemical detection in outer space, medical imaging, more.
Four seniors in the Principles and Practices of Assistive Technology program designed an audible device to help an MIT employee navigate on the water.
Process that modifies semiconductor material atom by atom could enable higher-performance electronics.
Mechanical engineering alumni of 2.009 (Product Engineering Processes) win with Rhino, a product that makes brick repointing faster, safer, and more accurate.
Forbes calls its 2019 30 Under 30 honorees “a collection of bold risk-takers who are putting a new twist on the old tools of the trade.”
“A diet or treatment of the microbiome may lead to increased diversity, but that does not mean it's better or healthier for you,” says the engineering professor.
Altered peptides from a South American wasp’s venom can kill bacteria but are nontoxic to human cells.