“Just ask questions and go for it!”
Senior Zaina Moussa’s path toward a career as a physician-scientist has included embracing her different cultures and varied interests.
Senior Zaina Moussa’s path toward a career as a physician-scientist has included embracing her different cultures and varied interests.
Kytopen is speeding up both discovery and delivery of engineered cell therapies with its transformative Flowfect platforms.
Deterministic lateral displacement assay can rapidly assess host inflammatory response, identifying a potentially life-threatening hyper-aggressive immune response.
Seven MIT researchers see lessons and opportunities for US health care.
Using deep convolutional neural networks, researchers devise a system that quickly analyzes wide-field images of patients’ skin in order to more efficiently detect cancer.
MIT research combines machine learning with nanoparticle design for personalized drug delivery.
Regina Barzilay, Fotini Christia, and Collin Stultz describe how artificial intelligence and machine learning can support fairness, personalization, and inclusiveness in health care.
Delivering vaccines directly to the lungs can boost immune responses to respiratory infections or lung cancer, study finds.
Wireless sensing technology could help improve patients’ technique with inhalers and insulin pens.
After studying and working on three continents, senior Andrea Orji now seeks to become a physician, eventually working in Nigeria.
Study finds patients are receptive to interacting with robots designed to evaluate symptoms in a contact-free way.
A strategy for preventing boron-containing compounds from breaking down could help medicinal chemists design new drugs.
Inspired by personal tragedy, graduate student Hyunwoo Yuk used his background in soft materials to develop a bioadhesive tape for repairing damaged tissue.
A new computational approach for analyzing complex datasets shows that as disease progresses, neurons and astrocytes lose the ability to maintain homeostasis.
Improved public health messaging to Black, Latinx, and other communities disproportionately impacted by the pandemic can increase Covid-19 knowledge and information-seeking.