Humanizing speech in the deaf-blind community
Sophomore Noopur Ranganathan's work empowers those with visual and auditory impairments to take communication into their own hands.
Sophomore Noopur Ranganathan's work empowers those with visual and auditory impairments to take communication into their own hands.
MIT Quest for Intelligence-sponsored undergraduate research projects demystify AI.
On the cusp of graduation, health sciences and technology doctoral candidate Agata Wiśniowska '11 sustains her decade-plus connection to the MIT Nuclear Reactor Lab.
For the 17th annual Kendall Lecture, Gretchen Daily analyzes species and ecosystem services and leverages natural capital to build a green financial system.
Despite global phase-out, the ozone-depleting chemical is still in production in eastern China.
“Metasurfaces” that manipulate light at tiny scales could find uses in cellphone lenses, smart-car sensors, and optical fibers.
Multilevel Mars greenhouse could provide food to sustain astronauts for several years.
Through computing, senior and Marshall Scholar Anna Sappington seeks answers to biological questions.
Research scientist Alessandro Marinoni shows that reversing traditional plasma shaping provides greater stability for fusion reactions.
Grantees will spend the 2019-2020 academic year pursuing research and teaching opportunities abroad.
Neuroscientists identify a brain circuit that helps break decisions down into smaller pieces.
An old artifact kept in a vault outside Paris is no longer the standard for the kilogram. Now, nature itself provides the definition.
A theoretical meteorology pioneer, Phillips showed that numerical models could predict weather and developed the first general circulation model of Earth’s climate.
“Being capable of thinking quantitatively — it’s the single most important thing,” says the former NFL lineman.
At the piano and in the lab, double major Tony Zhang is driven by curiosity and creativity.