Drawing daily doodles: Chalk of the Day brightens MIT
Chalk of the Day, an MIT student group, draws beautiful daily works of art on the chalk wall in Building 32.
Chalk of the Day, an MIT student group, draws beautiful daily works of art on the chalk wall in Building 32.
After surgery to correct childhood hearing loss, Swarna Jeewajee discovered a desire to be a physician-scientist, and a love of a cappella music.
When we appreciate calligraphy works in class, we also analyze the life experiences and stories of each calligrapher’s unique style.
A campaign to spread notes of kindness is coming to MIT, inspired by alumni Nick Demas and Jerry Wang.
With its centerpiece exhibit for the forthcoming Universal Hip Hop Museum, an MIT team uses artificial intelligence to explore the rich history of hip hop music.
The book publisher continues to produce intellectually daring, scholarly work.
Transportation, communication, development, and social interaction are explored through the lens of the urban.
The Space Exploration Initiative’s latest research flight explores work and play in microgravity.
MIT PhD student George Lordos and his brother Alexandros led the project; goal of the Mars Society competition was to establish a colony on Mars for 1,000 residents.
With “In Event of Moon Disaster,” the MIT Center for Advanced Virtuality aims to educate the public on deepfakes with an alternative history of the moon landing.
In a new anthropology and studio art course, MIT students investigate the human dimensions of interacting with technologies.
Emily Richmond Pollock’s book examines creative attempts to refashion postwar opera after Germany’s “Year Zero.”
This season of musical performances features a range of Boston premieres and diverse collaborations.
Algorithm enables one audio signal to glide into another, recreating the “portamento” effect of some musical instruments.
How the humanities, arts, and social science fields can help shape the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing — and benefit from advanced computing.