Probing how proteins pair up inside cells
MIT biologists drilled down into how proteins recognize and bind to one another, informing drug treatments for cancer.
MIT biologists drilled down into how proteins recognize and bind to one another, informing drug treatments for cancer.
Assistant Professor Marzyeh Ghassemi explores how hidden biases in medical data could compromise artificial intelligence approaches.
MIT scientists discuss the future of AI with applications across many sectors, as a tool that can be both beneficial and harmful.
In 2.C01, George Barbastathis demonstrates how mechanical engineers can use their knowledge of physical systems to keep algorithms in check and develop more accurate predictions.
David Gamarnik has developed a new tool, the overlap gap property, for understanding computational problems that appear intractable.
Arlene Fiore uses satellite data paired with ground observations to refine our understanding of ozone smog and interactions with meteorology and climate.
MIT alumni-founded Spoiler Alert matches major food brands with discount grocers to sell perishable products.
The 2021-22 Accenture Fellows are bolstering research and igniting ideas to help transform global business.
Deep-learning methods confidently recognize images that are nonsense, a potential problem for medical and autonomous-driving decisions.
MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab researchers aim to design concrete mixtures that use AI to shrink environmental footprint and cost, while recycling byproducts and increasing performance.
A new study finds that investments in R&D on materials and chemistry were key, while economies of scale contributed somewhat less.
New work on linear-probing hash tables from MIT CSAIL could lead to more efficient data storage and retrieval in computers.
Researchers analyze and compare pre- and post-pandemic data for introductory biology MOOC 7.00x.
Researchers decipher when and why immune cells fail to respond to immunotherapy, and suggest that T cells need a different kind of prodding in order to re-engage the immune response.
A National Science Foundation-funded team will use artificial intelligence to speed up discoveries in physics, astronomy, and neuroscience.