Three MIT faculty elected 2020 ACM Fellows
Association for Computing Machinery honors Anantha Chandrakasan, Alan Edelman, and Samuel Madden for work that underpins contemporary computing.
Association for Computing Machinery honors Anantha Chandrakasan, Alan Edelman, and Samuel Madden for work that underpins contemporary computing.
Associate Professor Michael Short’s innovative approach can be seen in the two nuclear science and engineering courses he’s transformed.
Prominent finance expert, a veteran of both public service and the private sector, to be nominee for top market-regulation post.
Electrical engineer William Oliver develops technology to enable reliable quantum computing at scale.
Lander to take a leave of absence to assume Cabinet-level post; Zuber to co-chair presidential advisory council.
Brain and cognitive sciences professor will lead the Institute’s interdisciplinary initiative to advance research in natural and artificial intelligence.
Jesse Kroll and Cathy Drennan honored as "Committed to Caring."
Associate professor of physics shares the honor with colleague Phillip Mocz for their novel dark matter research.
Two MIT faculty members earn funding from the G. Harold and Leila Y. Mathers Foundation.
Former Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering head and AGU president revolutionized thinking about the global water cycle, raising it to a place of prominence in the geosciences, and inspiring generations of students.
Those who are experiencing a financial hardship are encouraged to apply.
MIT Sloan professor of the practice recognized by U.S. Association of Small Business and Entrepreneurship for years of distinguished leadership.
The cross-campus effort will design human-machine systems that improve communication across divides and increase opportunity for underheard communities.
EECS faculty head of artificial intelligence and decision making honored for significant and extended contributions to the field of AI.
To understand ourselves and our place in the universe, “we should have humility but also self-respect,” the physicist writes in a new book.