Surveying the quality of life at MIT
A new survey of MIT students, faculty, and staff will inform initiatives to improve the work-life experience on campus and at Lincoln Laboratory.
A new survey of MIT students, faculty, and staff will inform initiatives to improve the work-life experience on campus and at Lincoln Laboratory.
Qubits made from strontium and calcium ions can be precisely controlled by technology that already exists.
Workshop highlights how MIT research can guide adaptation at local, regional, and national scales.
Two staff members from Lincoln Laboratory and a professor in the School of Engineering are recognized for their influential research.
Real-time visibility estimates are a critical need in remote areas where visual flight is common and automated weather stations are scarce.
Technique may help remotely image and assess health of infants, burn victims, and accident survivors in hard-to-reach places.
Weekend robotics workshops help middle and high school girls dispel “computing phobia.”
To help the region catch up, students organize summit to bring Latin policymakers and researchers to MIT.
MIT Kavli Institute researcher working on the TESS mission gave the keynote address at an annual event organized by the Lincoln Laboratory Hispanic/Latino Network.
Cornell University’s Paul McEuen will inaugurate series to honor beloved MIT professor.
International awards recognize innovations that can have significant impacts on society.
Envisioning the future (and challenges) of designing affordable technology-enabled mobility devices.
A low-cost analog circuit based on synchronizing oscillators could scale up quickly and cheaply to beat out digital computers.
Modeling web traffic could aid cybersecurity, computing infrastructure design, Internet policy, and more.
In-band full-duplex techniques applied to a phased-array antenna may provide a tenfold speedup in data transmit and receive rates while supporting a rapidly increasing number of wireless devices.