Hacking the challenges that are hard to talk about
Hack for Inclusion partnered with corporations and organizations to pose 14 challenges directly related to problems those groups are currently facing.
Hack for Inclusion partnered with corporations and organizations to pose 14 challenges directly related to problems those groups are currently facing.
Speakers at MIT climate symposium outline the steps needed to achieve global carbon neutrality by midcentury.
Tech-based solutions sought for challenges in work environments, education for girls and women, maternal and newborn health, and sustainable food.
In a Starr Forum talk, Luis Videgaray, director of MIT’s AI Policy for the World Project, outlines key facets of regulating new technologies.
MIT professor and alumna shared the 2019 Nobel Prize in economics, which recognized collaborators’ “experimental approach to alleviating global poverty.”
Retired Navy four-star admiral and former chancellor of University of Texas system will address the Class of 2020 on May 29.
Exonerated Central Park Five member Kevin Richardson details his harrowing experiences and his hopeful vision for the future.
Susan Silbey, a pioneer in studying popular attitudes toward the legal system, discussed her research while giving MIT’s annual Killian Lecture.
E14 Venture Summit celebrates the diversity of spinoff companies from the Media Lab.
Three-day hackathon explores methods for making artificial intelligence faster and more sustainable.
In a lively poster session, more than 100 undergraduates discuss their yearlong research projects on everything from machine learning to political geography.
Deborah Hung shares research strategies to combat tuberculosis as part of the Department of Biology's IAP seminar series on microbes in health and disease.
MindHandHeart is finding new ways to encourage healthy, positive social media use.
Student committee puts together research showcase while balancing coursework, qualifying exams, and extracurriculars.
A MindHandHeart Innovation Fund project spearheaded by staff member Angelique Scarpa is bringing elements of nature to MIT.