Nine from MIT named 2023 Sloan Research Fellows
Annual award honors early-career researchers for creativity, innovation, and research accomplishments.
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Annual award honors early-career researchers for creativity, innovation, and research accomplishments.
Seven researchers, along with 14 additional MIT alumni, are honored for significant contributions to engineering research, practice, and education.
Six distinguished scientists with ties to MIT were recognized for significant contributions to computing systems.
A new measure can help scientists decide which estimation method to use when modeling a particular data problem.
Study shows that if autonomous vehicles are widely adopted, hardware efficiency will need to advance rapidly to keep computing-related emissions in check.
New system can teach a group of cooperative or competitive AI agents to find an optimal long-term solution.
Guy Bresler builds mathematical models to understand multifaceted, interdisciplinary engineering problems that have far-reaching applications.
Mohammad Javad Khojasteh, a postdoc at MIT LIDS, uses both classical and quantum physics to improve state-of-the-art capabilities in communication, sensing, and computation.
Professor of electrical engineering and computer science will receive additional support to advance his research and career.
Researchers develop tools to help data scientists make the features used in machine-learning models more understandable for end users.
Graduate student Sarah Cen explores the interplay between humans and artificial intelligence systems, to help build accountability and trust.
Researchers use artificial intelligence to help autonomous vehicles avoid idling at red lights.
For individuals who communicate using a single switch, a new interface learns how they make selections, and then self-adjusts accordingly.
Researchers design a user-friendly interface that helps nonexperts make forecasts using data collected over time.
Veteran and PhD student Andrea Henshall has used MIT Open Learning to soar from the Air Force to multiple aeronautics degrees.