STEM + humanities = a framework for understanding the world
Natasha Joglekar ’21 is eager to apply her MIT education, with a major in computer science and biology and a minor in women’s and gender studies, to a career in medical research.
Natasha Joglekar ’21 is eager to apply her MIT education, with a major in computer science and biology and a minor in women’s and gender studies, to a career in medical research.
Ranked at the top for the 10th straight year, the Institute also places first in 12 subject areas.
Ten principal investigators from seven MIT departments and labs will receive up to $150,000 for two years, overhead-free, for innovative research on global food and water challenges.
MIT instructors honored for creating multidimensional, multidisciplinary online courses that help learners everywhere address real-world problems.
Math professor Ankur Moitra seeks algorithms with provable guarantees, to pin down the mechanisms of machine learning.
At Picower Institute symposium, speakers describe harms of early exposure to trauma, racism, as well as the restorative power of understanding, nurturing, and extending opportunity.
Yichen Shen PhD '16 is CEO of Lightelligence, an MIT spinout using photonics to reinvent computing for artificial intelligence.
At the Henry W. Kendall Memorial Lecture, biostatistician Francesca Dominici illuminates the interplay between air pollution, environmental injustice, and Covid-19.
Planetary physicist and former director of the MIT Center for Space Research and the Arecibo Observatory helped repurpose military radar technology for science and space exploration.
Matthew Johnston ’20 uses physics and baseball skills to get remote villages on the grid.
Study yields clues into how nitrogenase, an enzyme critical for life, converts nitrogen into ammonia.
Visualization software and hardware could offer new possibilities for coaching and sports training.
Machine learning software advances could help anesthesiologists optimize drug dose.
Whether testing high-field fusion magnets or his own physical endurance, Theo Mouratidis pushes the limits.
Grants will support their research, graduate study, and teaching abroad in 2021-22.