7 win presidential early career honors
MIT has greatest number of recipients from a single institution.
MIT has greatest number of recipients from a single institution.
Discovery that tumor cells can escape from chemotherapy could lead to new treatments that prevent relapse.
New study shows that costs and rewards of behavior help the brain form optimal habits.
MIT researchers aim to learn biology’s secrets for making tough, resilient materials out of simple components, and then improve on them.
HST student develops model that can help marathon runners pace themselves to a strong finish.
Study of blind patients supports the idea that there is a period early in a person’s development when brain regions can switch functions.
Biological engineer’s new approach to studying gene control could lead to new drug targets.
The Whitehead Institute member and MIT biology professor is one of 10 chosen to receive the top U.S. science honor.
Microchip technology rapidly identifies compounds for regrowing nerves, in live animals.
New finding that tumor cells in both species have too many chromosomes could help pinpoint genes that drive cancer development.
The grants are designed to promote risky, innovative research with the potential to transform a field of study.
In Killian Award lecture, Rudolf Jaenisch outlines progress and possibilities for treating human disease with stem cells.
A cancer-cell quirk could be exploited to develop new drugs that starve tumors.
New self-assembling photovoltaic technology can keep repairing itself to avoid any loss in performance.
Undergraduates invited to conduct hands-on research with MIT faculty