Benjamin Chang: Might technology tip the global scales?
MIT graduate student is assessing the impacts of artificial intelligence on military power, with a focus on the US and China.
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MIT graduate student is assessing the impacts of artificial intelligence on military power, with a focus on the US and China.
MIT seniors will pursue graduate studies at Cambridge University.
Susan Silbey, a pioneer in studying popular attitudes toward the legal system, discussed her research while giving MIT’s annual Killian Lecture.
Chalk of the Day, an MIT student group, draws beautiful daily works of art on the chalk wall in Building 32.
Improving the rate of handwashing at just 10 major airports could significantly slow the spread of a viral disease, researchers estimate.
Evidence links Dutch-era sugar production and greater economic activity today.
With the initial organizational structure in place, the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing moves forward with implementation.
The first cohort of 22 students from 14 countries share a common ambition: harnessing data to help others.
MIT professor emerita talks about her new memoir and aging in a patriarchal society.
After surgery to correct childhood hearing loss, Swarna Jeewajee discovered a desire to be a physician-scientist, and a love of a cappella music.
Academic, government, and advocacy leaders gathered to promote collaborative research partnerships to identify strategies that help workers thrive in today’s labor market.
Some basic metrics do effectively diagnose care quality, according to MIT economists.
In a lively poster session, more than 100 undergraduates discuss their yearlong research projects on everything from machine learning to political geography.
When we appreciate calligraphy works in class, we also analyze the life experiences and stories of each calligrapher’s unique style.
New book explores the use of blood in political rhetoric, imagery, and activism, and even the politics of blood drives.