Setting a new standard for hormone health
Alumna-founded Aavia uses education, community, and technology to change the way people think about hormones.
Alumna-founded Aavia uses education, community, and technology to change the way people think about hormones.
Researchers argue the plant could provide multiple benefits for California, including desalinated water and clean hydrogen fuel.
Collaborative team wins prestigious NIH grant to investigate the physical forces that influence metastatic cancer.
Participants from across the climate and energy sectors gathered remotely and at MIT to discuss new, transformative technologies.
A new machine-learning system helps robots understand and perform certain social interactions.
A screening method developed by MIT researchers targets hydrogen peroxide in the search for new cancer therapeutics.
Graduate application assistance programs pair applicants with student and alumni mentors.
Dana Al-Sulaiman, a recent postdoc with MIT’s Ibn Khaldun Fellowship for Saudi Arabian Women, has developed a cheap, minimally invasive diagnostic test for cancer.
Reducing the complexity of a powerful machine-learning model may help level the playing field for automatic speech-recognition around the world.
Biogen’s support is part of the biotechnology company’s Healthy Climate, Healthy Lives Initiative.
Students featured in public art exhibits in prominent locations throughout Boston.
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.