MIT PhD students shed light on important water and food research
J-WAFS Fellows discuss their inspiration for pursuing challenges in water and food systems.
J-WAFS Fellows discuss their inspiration for pursuing challenges in water and food systems.
Researchers make headway in solving a longstanding problem of balancing curious “exploration” versus “exploitation” of known pathways in reinforcement learning.
MIT Energy Initiative Annual Research Conference highlights both opportunities and obstacles in the race to a net-zero future.
Liam Gale, new program administrator for the Student Veteran Success Office, describes experiences of student veterans and how the Institute supports them.
With new techniques in electron microscopy, James LeBeau explores the nanoscale landscape within materials to understand their properties.
Hasso Plattner Institute-MIT Research Program on Designing for Sustainability will focus on sustainable design, innovation, and digital technologies.
Metal stents or staples that disintegrate on demand inside the body could eliminate some surgical and endoscopic procedures.
Provider of ultra-high resolution 3D printing becomes sustaining member of industry group.
Valued mentor was known for research in intensity perception, hearing-impairment characterization, and aids for the deaf.
The device provides greater sensitivity and speed than previous versions, and could be used for industrial inspection, airport security, and communications.
Pacemakers and other medical devices, as well as long-distance drones and remote sensors, could require fewer battery replacements with new approach.
Up to one-third of the carbon consumed by Prochlorococcus may come from sources other than photosynthesis.
A new study suggests mobile data collected while traveling over bridges could help evaluate their integrity.
Models trained on synthetic data can be more accurate than other models in some cases, which could eliminate some privacy, copyright, and ethical concerns from using real data.
By analyzing enzyme activity at the organism, tissue, and cellular scales, new sensors could provide new tools to clinicians and cancer researchers.