How do you hack health care?
With MIT Hacking Medicine, brilliant minds converge at MIT to contribute to design thinking for health care.
With MIT Hacking Medicine, brilliant minds converge at MIT to contribute to design thinking for health care.
MIT researcher discusses a new study on correlations among medical problems.
MIT spinout signs deal to commercialize microchips that release therapeutics inside the body.
Erica Caple James investigates how behavior, culture, and structural inequalities impact health.
Engineered particles are capable of producing toxins that are deadly to targeted bacteria.
Rich Fletcher and Daniel Chamberlain will use their winnings to field-test a low-cost mobile device to diagnose pulmonary disease in rural India.
Manipulating the permeability of a type of vacuole could help defeat malarial parasites.
Robotic stingrays, driverless golf carts, and a cancer-detection device were on display.
By revealing loss of motor skills, typing patterns may help to identify early onset of Parkinson’s.
Peer-to-peer application outperforms conventional self-help technique for easing depression, anxiety.
Amy Finkelstein spotted an opportunity to bring the gold standard in scientific research to one of the most pressing questions of the day.
In talks at MIT, noted behavioral expert suggests encouraging skills of people with autism.
Admissions Office forms a cross-departmental wellness program to help employees weather long workdays.