System tracks movement of food through global humanitarian supply chain
Unique barcodes scannable in a mobile application will enable food-aid stakeholders to follow individual items from production through delivery.
Unique barcodes scannable in a mobile application will enable food-aid stakeholders to follow individual items from production through delivery.
Whitehead Institute researchers find many transcription factors bind RNA, which fine-tunes their regulation of gene expression, suggesting new therapeutic opportunities.
Distinctive EEG patterns indicate when a patient’s state of unconsciousness under general anesthesia is more profound than necessary.
A new study shows that truncated versions of the Tau protein are more likely to form the sticky filaments seen in the brains of people with Alzheimer’s disease.
PIGINet leverages machine learning to streamline and enhance household robots' task and motion planning, by assessing and filtering feasible solutions in complex environments.
A new report by MIT researchers highlights the potential of generative AI to help workers with certain writing assignments.
A new technology called RIBOmap can give researchers valuable insight into how protein production in animal and human tissue is altered in disease.
Researchers create a privacy technique that protects sensitive data while maintaining a machine-learning model’s performance.
Study shows that cities’ plans often won’t achieve their goals, but decarbonizing the local grid could make the difference.
In China, the use of AI-driven facial recognition helps the regime repress dissent while enhancing the technology, researchers report.
“FrameDiff” is a computational tool that uses generative AI to craft new protein structures, with the aim of accelerating drug development and improving gene therapy.
The color changes reflect significant shifts in essential marine ecosystems.
Study shows moving can help foster a more robust social network, by strengthening “long ties” with others.
A new technique uses remote images to gauge the strength of ancient and active rivers beyond Earth.
New soft-bodied robots that can be controlled by a simple magnetic field are well suited to work in confined spaces.