Living sensors at your fingertips
Cell-infused gloves and bandages light up when in contact with certain chemicals.
Cell-infused gloves and bandages light up when in contact with certain chemicals.
Twelve finalist teams pitched diverse new health care technologies at MIT.
MIT professor in architecture and engineering will serve three-year term.
Technique could provide unique views of single molecules that conventional methods can’t match.
Leadership has been defined by energy, optimism, persistence, and a commitment to leveraging the school’s impact across MIT and beyond.
New iron oxide nanoparticles could help avoid a rare side effect caused by current contrast agents.
MIT faculty reflect on why international collaboration benefits science, engineering, and technology for all.
Low-power special-purpose chip could make speech recognition ubiquitous in electronics.
Portable tool could help scientists learn more about cells’ roles in many diseases.
New members have made advances in artificial skin, wireless communications, nanotechnology, hydrology, and cancer treatment.
Panamanian delegates participating in the U.S. Trade and Development Agency Global Procurement Initiative visited MIT to learn about life-cycle cost analysis models.
New chip would thwart the counterfeiting that plagues the market for wired device chargers.
A $20 million gift from Lisa Yang and Hock Tan ’75 SM ’75 will catalyze multidisciplinary autism research.