Energy-efficient encryption for the internet of things
Special-purpose chip reduces power consumption of public-key encryption by 99.75 percent, increases speed 500-fold.
Special-purpose chip reduces power consumption of public-key encryption by 99.75 percent, increases speed 500-fold.
TREX program from the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering takes students to Hawaii to conduct environmental research.
CSAIL's NanoMap system enables drones to avoid obstacles while flying at 20 miles per hour, by more deeply integrating sensing and control.
Assistant professor in EECS is developing materials with novel structures and useful applications, including renewable energy and information storage.
Leadership urged to consider societal and ethical questions alongside the technical.
In MIT talk, prominent philosopher urges self-reflection to keep academic institutions vital and fair.
Study finds adding volcanic ash reduces the overall energy required to manufacture concrete.
Class brings together MIT students and clinicians from local hospitals to design medical devices that address real-world health needs.
With new approach, researchers specify desired properties of a material, and a computer system generates a structure accordingly.
Mechanical engineering researchers are developing new and innovative ways to improve health care.
MIT senior and Marshall Scholar Liang Zhou wants to elucidate the neural basis for our thoughts and intuitions.
Funding is available to MIT faculty to support educational innovations in pre-K-12, Higher Education, and Workplace Learning.
New cancer research initiative eyes individualized treatment for patients.
"We need to look to the past in the face of modern innovations in machine learning, robotics, artificial intelligence, big data, and beyond," says the economist.