This is your brain. This is your brain on code
MIT researchers are discovering which parts of the brain are engaged when a person evaluates a computer program.
MIT researchers are discovering which parts of the brain are engaged when a person evaluates a computer program.
CAST Visiting Artist Andreas Refsgaard engages the MIT community in the ethics and play of creative coding.
Students reflect on their top performance in Dhaka, Bangladesh, which ended a 44-year drought for MIT.
Students describe what it’s like to compete at the very top tiers of computing.
“I get the chance to not only watch the future happen, but I can actually be a part of it and create it,” says Ugandan entrepreneur Emmanuel Kasigazi.
Mayor’s youth employment program brought local high schoolers to MIT this summer.
Researchers developed a new system that can make computer programs run faster, while guaranteeing accuracy.
Thousands of children participate in MIT-developed artificial intelligence curriculum.
To put global climate modeling at the fingertips of local decision-makers, some scientists think it’s time to rethink the system from scratch.
The programs are designed to foster an understanding of how artificial intelligence technologies work, including their social implications.
Empowering a global community of learners in displacement.
Twist is an MIT-developed programming language that can describe and verify which pieces of data are entangled to prevent bugs in a quantum program.
MIT computer scientists and mathematicians offer an introductory computing and career-readiness program for incarcerated women in New England.
A new “common-sense” approach to computer vision enables artificial intelligence that interprets scenes more accurately than other systems do.
Senior Shardul Chiplunkar aims to be a translator between the tech world and the rest of society.