Smarter driving, using your phone
App that rates drivers’ behavior yields promising safety results on the road.
App that rates drivers’ behavior yields promising safety results on the road.
“3-D physics engine” from the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory simulates the human brain to infer physical properties.
High-performance prototype means chipmakers could now start building optoelectronic chips.
Algorithms could learn to recognize objects from a few examples, not millions; may better model human cognition.
Three software products named among 100 most technologically significant innovations of 2015.
Software analyzes online chatter to predict health care consumers’ behavior.
Future versions of an algorithm from the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab could help with teaching, marketing, and memory improvement.
Robots, 3-D printers, and a surprise guest aim to get students excited about computer science.
Google experiments suggest that the D-Wave computer exploits quantum phenomena.
MIT professor’s startup makes synthesizing genes many times more cost effective.
Looking back on the year that was: Highlights from the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab in 2015.
New untraceable text-messaging system comes with statistical guarantees.
Developed in collaboration with the MIT Media Lab and Tufts University, the PBS KIDS ScratchJr app helps children ages 5-8 learn coding concepts.
Algorithms exploiting light’s polarization boost resolution of commercial depth sensors 1,000-fold.