Professor Emeritus Michael Athans, pioneer in control theory, dies at 83
Longtime professor of electrical engineering was also a transformative director of the MIT Laboratory for Information and Decisions Systems.
Longtime professor of electrical engineering was also a transformative director of the MIT Laboratory for Information and Decisions Systems.
MIT CSAIL researchers say improving computing technology after Moore's Law will require more efficient software, new algorithms, and specialized hardware.
Though the MIT community was spread around the world due to Covid-19, graduates and their families celebrated magic moments through social posts.
In a pair of papers from MIT CSAIL, two teams enable better sense and perception for soft robotic grippers.
Approach for generating numbers at random may help analyses of complex systems, from Earth’s climate to financial markets.
Marshalling forces from across the Institute, MIT will deliver an online celebration worthy of the Class of 2020.
UROP students explore applications in robotics, health care, language understanding, and nuclear engineering.
Smith spoke with CSAIL Director Daniela Rus as part of a special series co-presented by the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing.
The MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab is funding 10 research projects aimed at addressing the health and economic consequences of the pandemic.
An MIT system uses wireless signals to measure in-home appliance usage to better understand health tendencies.
Isolat, a volunteer collaboration organized by the Institute for Data, Systems, and Society, informs coronavirus policy by analyzing data associated with the pandemic.
In a new undergraduate course, students explore the ethical dimensions of their experiences.
Researchers test how far artificial intelligence models can go in dreaming up varied poses and colors of objects and animals in photos.
Researchers unveil a pruning algorithm to make artificial intelligence applications run faster.
Researchers show that computers can “write” algorithms that adapt to radically different environments better than algorithms designed by humans.