MIT-Takeda Program heads into fourth year with crop of 10 new projects
The program leverages MIT’s research expertise and Takeda’s industrial know-how for research in artificial intelligence and medicine.
The program leverages MIT’s research expertise and Takeda’s industrial know-how for research in artificial intelligence and medicine.
The device could help workers locate objects for fulfilling e-commerce orders or identify parts for assembling products.
19th Microsystems Annual Research Conference reveals the next era of microsystems technologies, along with skiing and a dance party.
The soft robotic models are patient-specific and could help clinicians zero in on the best implant for an individual.
The chip, which can decipher any encoded signal, could enable lower-cost devices that perform better while requiring less hardware.
Analyses show stakeholders of all levels must get involved in decarbonizing pavements to reach climate goals.
The receiver chip efficiently blocks signal interference that slows device performance and drains batteries.
A wireless technique enables a super-cold quantum computer to send and receive data without generating too much error-causing heat.
Associate Professor Robert Macfarlane is uncovering design principles that allow researchers to fine-tune materials at many size scales.
Annual award honors early-career researchers for creativity, innovation, and research accomplishments.
An MIT team is working to harness combustion to yield valuable materials, including some that are critical in the manufacture of lithium-ion batteries.
MIT Leaders for Global Operations’ collaboration with the Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering trains leaders for a rapidly evolving industry.
A new method for removing the greenhouse gas from the ocean could be far more efficient than existing systems for removing it from the air.
Smith, in discussion with Center for Transportation and Logistics Director Yossi Sheffi, reflects on 50 years in business and building for the future.
Using lasers, researchers can directly control a property of nuclei called spin, that can encode quantum information.