Computing for ocean environments
MIT ocean and mechanical engineers are using advances in scientific computing to address the ocean’s many challenges, and seize its opportunities.
MIT ocean and mechanical engineers are using advances in scientific computing to address the ocean’s many challenges, and seize its opportunities.
Scientists demonstrate that AI-risk models, paired with AI-designed screening policies, can offer significant and equitable improvements to cancer screening.
Gilda Barabino, president of Olin College of Engineering and professor of biomedical and chemical engineering, inaugurates the new series.
MIT engineers are working on a new kind of device that could streamline the process of blood glucose measurement and insulin injection.
Senior Ibuki Iwasaki seeks creative ways to design technology that considers the human user.
MIT computer scientists and mathematicians offer an introductory computing and career-readiness program for incarcerated women in New England.
Researchers have created a method to help workers collaborate with artificial intelligence systems.
MIT researchers lay out a strategy for how universities can help the US regain its place as a semiconductor superpower.
SMART breakthrough could help develop technologies that can identify materials according to desired properties for specific applications.
Faculty members recognized for excellence via a diverse array of honors, grants, and prizes.
Researchers develop a way to test whether popular methods for understanding machine-learning models are working correctly.
Spread out or bead up? A new process enables control over liquid-solid interfaces even with the most unlikely pairs of materials.
Undergraduate classes provide hands-on introduction to nanotechnology and nanoengineering at MIT.nano.
Seniors David Darrow and Tara Venkatadri and HST student James Diao will pursue master’s programs at Cambridge University.
MIT EECS student and Mitchell Scholar hopes to play music in Dublin while working on his MS in intelligent systems.