MIT.nano awards inaugural NCSOFT seed grants for gaming technologies
Five software and hardware projects will launch the MIT.nano Immersion Lab Gaming Program.
Five software and hardware projects will launch the MIT.nano Immersion Lab Gaming Program.
New structural design could lead to self-deploying tents or adaptive robotic fins.
Vaccines packaged in novel nanoparticles could offer a new way to fight cancer and infectious diseases.
MIT team successfully tests a new method for verification of weapons reduction.
RFID-based devices work in indoor and outdoor lighting conditions, and communicate at greater distances.
Algorithm enables one audio signal to glide into another, recreating the “portamento” effect of some musical instruments.
Rapid imaging method could help reveal how conditions such as autism affect brain cells.
Revolutionizing video games with physics, Weaver has also influenced MIT students with lessons on design, virtual reality, storytelling, and games for social change.
Study offers models for preserving the privacy of citizens while using their data to improve government services.
Researchers integrate diamond-based sensing components onto a chip to enable low-cost, high-performance quantum hardware.
Recent improvements aim to ease the transition to life at MIT, from day one and beyond.
MIT planetary scientists partner with computer scientists to find exoplanets.
Matthew Evans, Joseph Formaggio, Markus Klute, and Anne White are named MIT’s newest APS fellows for their contributions to physics.
Brian Anthony, co-leader of SENSE.nano, discusses sensing for augmented and virtual reality and for advanced manufacturing.
Summer program in civil and environmental engineering examines the intersection of modern engineering and cultural heritage.