Mapping molecular markers of physical fitness
A new study reveals cellular pathways that appear to underlie some differences in physical fitness.
A new study reveals cellular pathways that appear to underlie some differences in physical fitness.
Startup accelerator program grows to over 30 companies, almost half of them with MIT pedigrees.
From early motion-sensing platforms to environmental monitoring, the professor and head of the Program in Media Arts and Sciences has turned decades of cross-disciplinary research into real-world impact.
In Compton Lecture at MIT, social psychologist Jonathan Haidt warns of dramatic global decay in cognition, attention spans, and civic life, and urges curbs to tech use.
By providing holistic information on a cell, an AI-driven method could help scientists better understand disease mechanisms and plan experiments.
Time and again, an unassuming roundworm has illuminated aspects of biology with major consequences for human health.
Global Change Outlook report for 2025 shows how accelerated action can reduce climate risks and improve sustainability outcomes, while highlighting potential geopolitical hurdles.
In the 2025 Dresselhaus Lecture, the materials scientist describes her work 3D printing soft materials ranging from robots to human tissues.
Using a versatile problem-solving framework, researchers show how early relapse in lymphoma patients influences their chance for survival.
Co-founded by an MIT alumnus, Watershed Bio offers researchers who aren’t software engineers a way to run large-scale analyses to accelerate biology.
Speakers at MIT’s Aging Brain Initiative symposium described how immune system factors during aging contribute to Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and other conditions. The field is leveraging that knowledge to develop new therapies.
The findings may offer a new way to help heal tissue damage from radiation or chemotherapy treatment.
By enabling rapid annotation of areas of interest in medical images, the tool can help scientists study new treatments or map disease progression.
Tom Zeller’s new book, “The Headache,” sheds light on one of the world’s most confounding and agonizing ailments.
Tools build on years of research at Lincoln Laboratory to develop a rapid brain health screening capability and may also be applicable to civilian settings such as sporting events and medical offices.