Microelectronics projects awarded CHIPS and Science Act funding
MIT and Lincoln Laboratory are among awardees of $38 million in project awards to the Northeast Microelectronics Coalition to boost U.S. chip technology innovation.
MIT and Lincoln Laboratory are among awardees of $38 million in project awards to the Northeast Microelectronics Coalition to boost U.S. chip technology innovation.
New dataset of “illusory” faces reveals differences between human and algorithmic face detection, links to animal face recognition, and a formula predicting where people most often perceive faces.
A new method called Clio enables robots to quickly map a scene and identify the items they need to complete a given set of tasks.
The program will invite students to investigate new vistas at the intersection of music, computing, and technology.
The technique leverages quantum properties of light to guarantee security while preserving the accuracy of a deep-learning model.
Researchers argue that in health care settings, “responsible use” labels could ensure AI systems are deployed appropriately.
Undergraduate engineering is No. 1; undergraduate business and computer science programs are No. 2.
Researchers find large language models make inconsistent decisions about whether to call the police when analyzing surveillance videos.
The major effort to accelerate practical climate change solutions launches as its mission directors meet the Institute community.
“Co-LLM” algorithm helps a general-purpose AI model collaborate with an expert large language model by combining the best parts of both answers, leading to more factual responses.
Martin Luther King Jr. Visiting Professors and Scholars enhance community through engagement with MIT students and faculty.
New STUDIO.nano supports artistic research and encounters within MIT.nano’s facilities.
“ScribblePrompt” is an interactive AI framework that can efficiently highlight anatomical structures across different medical scans, assisting medical workers to delineate regions of interest and abnormalities.
Computer scientist who specializes in database management systems joins the leadership of the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.
A new algorithm solves complicated partial differential equations by breaking them down into simpler problems, potentially guiding computer graphics and geometry processing.