Wireless movement-tracking system could collect health and behavioral data
In some cases, radio frequency signals may be more useful for caregivers than cameras or other data-collection methods.
In some cases, radio frequency signals may be more useful for caregivers than cameras or other data-collection methods.
Research Experience for Undergraduates program participants bring diverse interests in sustainable energy, polymers, and physics.
Successfully launched project aims to understand why some injuries result in post-traumatic osteoarthritis while others heal and recover.
MIT/MGH's image-based deep learning model can predict breast cancer up to five years in advance.
Convergence research at MIT and beyond seeks new solutions for global challenges.
MIT CSAIL project shows the neural nets we typically train contain smaller “subnetworks” that can learn just as well, and often faster.
Study investigates capillary-induced deformations in cement’s porous structure.
Algorithm stitches multiple datasets into a single “panorama,” which could provide new insights for medical and biological studies.
In MIT D-Lab class 2.729 (Design for Scale), MIT students devise ways to manufacture products to reach as many people as possible.
Faculty members recognized for excellence via a diverse array of honors, grants, and prizes over the last quarter.
Pioneering materials science and engineering research enables better catalytic converters, miniature explosives detectors, and thin-film microbalances.
Ubiquitous marine plants dissipate wave energy and could help protect vulnerable shorelines.
TILclimate (Today I Learned: Climate) podcast demystifies the science, technology, and policy surrounding climate change in 10-minute bites.
No longer the MIT Pantone 201 red, the 551-pound vehicle is now black.
Data-sampling method makes “sketches” of unwieldy biological datasets while still capturing the full diversity of cell types.