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Camouflage

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Slate

“A team from MIT and Duke created flexible polymers that can change color and texture in response to a controlled voltage, essentially allowing them to camouflage an object with the flip of a switch,” reports Jim Festante for Slate. This mimics the ability of cephalopods in nature to rapidly change color.

The Washington Post

Professor Xuanhe Zhao has developed a material that mimics the ability of cephalopods such as cuttlefish, squids, and octopuses, to rapidly change color, reports Rachel Feltman for The Washington Post. "It's a fantastic quality, and one unprecedented in human engineering," says Zhao.

Boston Globe

Boston Globe reporter Kevin Hartnett writes about a new algorithm developed by a team of MIT researchers that can camouflage eyesores. The algorithm, “analyzes pictures of incongruous objects and creates custom camouflage that makes them fade into their surroundings,” Hartnett explains. 

Wired

“MIT’s big idea is to create printable camouflage coverings using algorithms,” writes Liz Stinson for Wired about new research from graduate student Andrew Owens that aims to hide eyesores. “These algorithms pull in environmental data via photographs and construct an image that best blends an object in with its surroundings.”