Ultrasound offers a new way to perform deep brain stimulation
MIT engineers’ implantable ImPULS device could become an alternative to the electrodes now used to treat Parkinson’s and other diseases.
MIT engineers’ implantable ImPULS device could become an alternative to the electrodes now used to treat Parkinson’s and other diseases.
The fellowships provide five years of funding to doctoral students in applied science, engineering, and mathematics who have “the extraordinary creativity and principled leadership necessary to tackle problems others can’t solve.”
MIT CSAIL’s frugal deep-learning model infers the hidden physical properties of objects, then adapts to find the most stable grasps for robots in unstructured environments like homes and fulfillment centers.
An atlas of human protein kinases enables scientists to map cell signaling pathways with unprecedented speed and detail.
With generative AI models, researchers combined robotics data from different sources to help robots learn better.
The findings should help scientists refine predictions of future sea-level rise.
SMART researchers find a cellular process called transfer ribonucleic acid (tRNA) modification influences the malaria parasite’s ability to develop resistance.
Collaborative scholarship and research will draw on conservation, design, and technology.
A new quantum-system-on-chip enables the efficient control of a large array of qubits, moving toward practical quantum computing.
A new approach could streamline virtual training processes or aid clinicians in reviewing diagnostic videos.
“Alchemist” system adjusts the material attributes of specific objects within images to potentially modify video game models to fit different environments, fine-tune VFX, and diversify robotic training.
Research surveys show warnings issued by world leaders are taken equally seriously whether issued on social media or through formal statements.
Letting people work with a “navigator” dramatically increases how often they move to higher-opportunity neighborhoods.
With support from The Marcus Foundation, an MIT neuroscientist and a Harvard Medical School immunologist will study the “fever effect” in an effort to devise therapies that mimic its beneficial effects.
The findings also reveal why identifying objects in black-and-white images is more difficult for individuals who were born blind and had their sight restored.