New program to support translational research in AI, data science, and machine learning
The MIT-Pillar AI Collective will cultivate prospective entrepreneurs and drive innovation.
The MIT-Pillar AI Collective will cultivate prospective entrepreneurs and drive innovation.
The device could help scientists explore unknown regions of the ocean, track pollution, or monitor the effects of climate change.
Neuroscience PhD student Fernanda De La Torre uses complex algorithms to investigate philosophical questions about perception and reality.
MIT researchers demonstrate an intracellular antenna that's compatible with 3D biological systems and can operate wirelessly inside a living cell.
By continuously monitoring a patient’s gait speed, the system can assess the condition’s severity between visits to the doctor’s office.
A new field study reveals a previously unobserved fluid dynamic process that is key to assessing impact of deep-sea mining operations.
“Distance Unknown,” an exhibition by MIT’s Civic Data Design Lab, documents the often challenging journeys migrants undertake to gain economic opportunity and food security.
Relying on evaporation and radiation — but not electricity — the system could keep food fresh longer or supplement air conditioning in buildings.
Edward Gibson and Eric Martinez are among this year's winners of the satiric prize, for explaining what makes legal documents so difficult to comprehend.
An experiment using data from 20 million LinkedIn profiles shows how much we rely on people we know less well to land new jobs.
A “grazing encounter” may have smashed the moon to bits to form Saturn’s rings, a new study suggests.
A simple animal model shows how stimuli and states such as smells, stressors, and satiety converge in an olfactory neuron to guide food-seeking behavior.
Refining current opacity models will be key to unearthing details of exoplanet properties — and signs of life — in data from the powerful new telescope.
In a long-studied population of wandering albatrosses, females are less likely to stick with a shy mate.
When holding information in mind, neural activity is more focused when and where there are bursts of gamma frequency rhythms.