Crystan McLymore SM ’23: Exceling at sea and in the lab
US Navy officer and recent MechE alumna who served on a nuclear aircraft carrier researches radiation detection.
US Navy officer and recent MechE alumna who served on a nuclear aircraft carrier researches radiation detection.
A new Jell-O-like material could replace metals as electrical interfaces for pacemakers, cochlear implants, and other electronic implants.
Tactile stimulation improved motor performance, reduced phosphorylated tau, preserved neurons and synapses, and reduced DNA damage, a new study shows.
Omer Yilmaz’s work on how diet influences intestinal stem cells could lead to new ways to treat or prevent gastrointestinal cancers.
The MIT D-Lab-supported startup SurgiBox has developed a portable kit that doctors can use to create sterile operating environments where they’re needed most.
With the artificial intelligence conversation now mainstream, the 2023 MIT-MGB AI Cures conference saw attendance double from previous years.
New MIT faculty member investigates how sensory input from within the body controls mammalian physiology and behavior.
Leo Anthony Celi invites industry to broaden its focus in gathering and analyzing clinical data for every population.
The bioderived “smart sutures” could help patients heal after bowel resection or other types of surgery.
The method could enable a rapid test to determine whether individuals are producing antibodies that help protect against Covid-19.
A collaborative research team from the MIT-Takeda Program combined physics and machine learning to characterize rough particle surfaces in pharmaceutical pills and powders.
A campus summit with the leader and his delegation centered around dialogue on biotechnology and innovation ecosystems.
The device, which uses electricity to boost hormone production in the stomach, could help to ease nausea and counteract appetite loss.
The new diagnostic, which is based on analysis of urine samples, could also be designed to reveal whether a tumor has metastasized.
The printer generates vaccine-filled microneedle patches that can be stored long-term at room temperature and applied to the skin.