Congressional seminar introduces MIT faculty to 30 Washington staffers
Security Studies Program offers knowledge on national security issues.
Security Studies Program offers knowledge on national security issues.
In annual T.T. and W.F. Chao Distinguished Buddhist Lecture Series, Baker takes up “Environment, Ethics and Embodiment: Buddhist Approaches to Climate Change.”
Delegation meets campus leaders, with an eye toward AI applications and the Icelandic language.
IDEAS awards more than $50,000 in grants across six student-led teams to develop projects addressing social and environmental challenges.
Hundreds of social impact leaders from around the world convene to discuss the world’s most imminent problems and how to ethically solve them.
Faculty, staff, and students come together in solidarity, to acknowledge the victims of the Buffalo, New York, mass shooting.
MIT and Mass General Brigham researchers and physicians connect in person to bring AI into mainstream health care.
In person for the first time in three years, the 2.007 (Design and Manufacturing I) Robot Competition celebrated its founder.
Nona Desalination is developing a compact water-desalination device that requires less electricity than a cell phone charger.
At the latest Starr Forum, John Tirman and his collaborators describe the cultural framework that has worsened US-Iran relations.
Professor Polina Anikeeva’s innovation in the treatment of neurological disorders highlights the interdisciplinary nature of her field.
Global Semiconductor Alliance’s Women’s Leadership Initiative highlights career opportunities for women in hard technology.
MIT to honor pandemic online graduates with on-campus event.
The student pitch competition included a variety of solutions addressing water access, usage, and maintenance.
Workshop hosted by MIT’s Climate and Sustainability Consortium, MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab, and the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing highlights how new approaches to computing can save energy and help the planet.