Artificial intelligence that understands object relationships
A new machine-learning model could enable robots to understand interactions in the world in the way humans do.
A new machine-learning model could enable robots to understand interactions in the world in the way humans do.
The findings could inform the design of new materials such as iridescent windows or waterproof textiles.
Paper-based blood test developed by SMART researchers can rapidly determine the presence of SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibodies.
The MIT senior will pursue postgraduate studies in intelligent systems in Ireland.
Senior Desmond Edwards has an insatiable curiosity about how the human body works — and how diseases stop it from working.
Mechanical engineers are using cutting-edge computing techniques to re-imagine how the products, systems, and infrastructures we use are designed.
Ruonan Han seeks to develop next-generation electronic devices by harnessing terahertz waves.
A delegation from MIT traveled to Glasgow for COP26, where international negotiators sought to keep global climate goals on track.
Professor Bilge Yildiz finds patterns in the behavior of ions across applications.
New work on linear-probing hash tables from MIT CSAIL could lead to more efficient data storage and retrieval in computers.
Condensed-matter theory PhD candidate Makinde Ogunnaike is featured in the Poetry of Science project.
Model-free framework reorients over 2,000 diverse objects with a hand facing both upward and downward, in a step toward more human-like manipulation.
By incorporating the scattering of RF waves into fusion simulations, MIT physicists improve heating and current drive predictions for fusion plasmas.
Faculty, staff, and alumni recognized for outstanding contributions to physics research, education, and policy.
Over 50 years at MIT, Dresselhaus made lasting contributions to materials science within the research group of longtime collaborator and wife, Mildred Dresselhaus.