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Awards, honors and fellowships

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Fast Company

MIT has been named to Fast Company’s 2025 Ignition School list, reports Ross Rubin for Fast Company. The award recognizes “colleges and universities shaping future entrepreneurs and innovators,” explains Rubin. “The colleges that lead our list represent the diversity of education approaches that will be needed to prepare the next generation of disrupters to prevail.” 

Forbes

Undergraduate student Kendree Chen has been named one of the 2025 U.S. Presidential Scholars, reports Michael T. Nietzel for Forbes. “This year’s group, the 61st in the program’s history, consisted of 161 outstanding high school seniors, who were selected for their accomplishments in academics, the arts, and career and technical education fields as well as for commitments to community service and leadership,” explains Nietzel. 

Architectural Record

Prof. Caitlin Mueller has been named Innovator of the Year by Architectural Record for her work advancing a “vision for building design and construction that unites these disciplines with computation to create structure that are sustainable, high performing, and delightful,” reports Architectural Record. “Her group develops computational design and digital fabrication methods that integrate efficiency, performance, material circularity, and architectural expression,” Architectural Record notes. “This work spans robotic assembly of optimized trusses, fabrication of low-cost earthen and concrete systems, and algorithmic strategies for reusing salvaged wood and reassembled concrete parts.” 

Time Magazine

MIT Dean of Digital Learning Cynthia Breazeal SM ’93, ScD ’00, Profs. Regina Barzilay and Priya Donti, and a number of MIT alumni have been named to Time’s TIME 100 AI 2025 list. The list spotlights “innovators, leaders, and thinkers reshaping our world through groundbreaking advances in artificial intelligence.”


 

The Boston Globe

Katie Rae, Engine CEO and managing partner, Smyon Dukach SM '92 and Brian Halligan MBA '05 have been named to the 2025 Boston Globe list of Tech Power Players in the venture capital sector, reports Aaron Pressman for The Boston Globe. 

The Boston Globe

Georgina Campbell Flatter SM '11, Carmichael Roberts MBA '00 and Elise Strobach SM '17, PhD '20 are among the 2025 Boston Globe Tech Power Players in the sustainability sector, reports Jon Chesto for The Boston Globe

The Boston Globe

Aman Narang '04, Meng '06, co-founder of Toast, has been named one of the 2025 Boston Globe Tech Power Players for his work in the software and cloud sector, reports Aiden Ryan for The Boston Globe

The Boston Globe

Prof. Dirk Englund, co-founder of QuEra, has been named one of the 2025 Boston Globe Tech Power Players for his work focused on quantum computing sector, reports Aaron Pressman for The Boston Globe. Pressman notes that at QuEra, “researchers are working to advance quantum computing from the theoretical to the practical.”

The Boston Globe

Sloan lecturer Mikey Shulman, Colin Angle '89, SM '90, Tye Brady SM '99, Laira Major SM '05, Dharmesh Shah SM '06 have been named to the 2025 Boston Globe Tech Power Players list for their work in the applied AI sector, reports Hiawatha Bray for The Boston Globe

The Boston Globe

Prof. Yet-Ming Chiang, Shreya Dave '09, SM ’12, PhD '16, Bob Mumgaard SM '15, PhD '15 and Sloan alumna Emily Reichert have been named to the 2025 Boston Globe Tech Power Players list for their efforts in the energy sector, reports Hiawatha Bray for The Boston Globe. Chiang emphasizes the importance of federal funding in advancing scientific research. “My entire career has been supported by US taxpayers,” Chiang says. “The ability to give back and develop technologies and create jobs, that’s a big motivator for me.”

The Boston Globe

Prof. Daniela Rus, director of CSAIL, and research affiliate Ramin Hasani have been named to The Boston Globe’s 2025 list of Tech Power Players working in the foundational AI sector, reports Aaron Pressman for The Boston Globe. Rus and Hasani are co-founders of Liquid AI, a startup that has developed “an AI technique with fewer software ‘neurons’ than large language models of OpenAI and others,” explains Pressman. This means “Liquid AI requires less computing power (and electricity.)” 

Chemical & Engineering News

Ankur Gupta SM '14, PhD '17 has been named to the Chemical & Engineering News’ 2025 Talent 12 list, which highlights young scientists using chemistry to create real-world solutions, reports Sam Lemonick for Chemical & Engineering News. “By accounting for the way particles move in a chemical gradient—a phenomenon known as diffusiophoresis… [Gupta and his colleagues have] improved a model that mathematician Alan Turing developed to explain patterns in nature, such as the shape of a zebra’s stripes or the spacing of a jellyfish’s tentacles,” explains Lemonick. 

Chemical & Engineering News

Prof. Ariel Furst has been named to Chemical & Engineering News’ 2025 Talented 12, which spotlights early-career scientists who are using their “chemistry know-how to make a real-world impact.” “By combining the power of biology with chemistry and materials engineering, Furst develops technologies to tackle crucial problems such as environmental remediation, sustainable agriculture, and carbon sequestration,” writes Prachi Patel. “Pretty much everything that agrochemicals do, there are microbes that we think do it better,” says Furst. “They do it more precisely and maintain the overall balance of the ecosystem much more effectively.”

The Tech

Undergraduate students Avani Ahuja '26, Julianna Lian '26, Jacqueline Prawira '26, and Alex Tang '26 have been honored as recipients of the Barry Goldwater Scholarship for the 2025-2026 academic year, reports Vivian Hir for The Tech. “Established by Congress in 1986, the Barry Goldwater Scholarship financially supports talented college sophomores and juniors who plan to pursue research careers in the natural sciences, mathematics, or engineering,” explains Hir. 

Forbes

Jia Haojun PhD '24, graduate student Gao Wenhao and postdoctoral associate James Utama Surjadi have been named to the Forbes 30 and Under 30 Asia: Healthcare & Science list, writes Yue Wang for Forbes. The list honors those “who are using cutting-edge technology to innovative and improve their industry.”