Size matters in particle treatments of traumatic injuries
A new analysis offers guidance on the size of nanoparticles that could be most effective at stopping internal bleeding.
A new analysis offers guidance on the size of nanoparticles that could be most effective at stopping internal bleeding.
Senior Heidi Li strives to help local communities understand how they can influence policymaking to achieve a more sustainable future.
A new deep-learning algorithm trained to optimize doses of propofol to maintain unconsciousness during general anesthesia could augment patient monitoring.
Passive solar evaporation system could be used to clean wastewater, provide potable water, or sterilize medical tools in off-grid areas.
Single-cell gene expression analyses of human cerebrovascular cells can help reveal new drug targets for Huntington’s disease.
Artists and industry professionals including AleXa join the online course, offering insights into Korean pop music.
The material could pave the way for sustainable plastics.
The startup r2c, founded by MIT alumni, offers a database of software security checks to simplify the process of securing code.
National Science Foundation award will allow the VELION FIB-SEM to become a permanent instrument in MIT.nano’s characterization facility.
With many devices depending on the motion of ions, light could be used as a switch to turn ion motion on and off.
In stepping down as co-director of the Harvard-MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology, Brown will work to develop a new center for anesthesiology research.
Senior Sihao Huang uses his background in physics and complex systems to inform his interdisciplinary approach to political science.
Measuring traffic properties requires vast amounts of data. Meshkat Botshekan, a PhD student working with the MIT CSHub, is discovering a more efficient and affordable physics-inspired alternative.
With a tensor language prototype, “speed and correctness do not have to compete ... they can go together, hand-in-hand.”
Heather Kulik embraces computer models as “the only way to make a dent” in the vast number of potential materials that could solve important problems.