MIT researchers honored for 'Revealing Invisible Changes'
CSAIL team recognized by National Science Foundation for video that catches motions too subtle for the naked eye.
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CSAIL team recognized by National Science Foundation for video that catches motions too subtle for the naked eye.
Researchers show how the vagaries of real-world circuitry affect the performance of a promising new technique in signal processing and imaging.
At the intersection of medicine and computer science, researchers look for clinically useful correlations amid mountains of information.
Poster session showcases student advances in key technologies and attracts faculty, venture capitalists and industry sponsors.
Beranek, Dennis, Chou, Jacobs and Langer are among 20 recipients recognized for decades of engineering achievements.
A new algorithm for message dissemination in decentralized networks is faster than its predecessors but, unlike them, guarantees delivery.
Undergraduate teams create helpful phone apps and devices for people with disabilities.
New design for a basic component of all computer chips boasts the highest ‘carrier mobility’ yet measured.
MIT researchers develop the smallest indium gallium arsenide transistor ever built.
A new programming language for image-processing algorithms yields code that’s much shorter and clearer — but also faster.
Jing Kong’s research focuses on how to make and control novel forms of thin-film carbon.