Companies use MIT research to identify and respond to supply chain risks
Pinpointing risks can also help businesses save money as they become more resilient.
Pinpointing risks can also help businesses save money as they become more resilient.
Just 33 light-years from Earth, the system appears to host two rocky, Earth-sized planets.
The varied surface suggests a dynamic history, which could include metallic eruptions, asteroid-shaking impacts, and a lost rocky mantle.
Researchers demonstrate two security methods that efficiently protect analog-to-digital converters from powerful attacks that aim to steal user data.
Using this diagnostic, doctors could avoid prescribing antibiotics in cases where they won’t be effective.
The new design is stackable and reconfigurable, for swapping out and building on existing sensors and neural network processors.
A study shows that yeast, an abundant waste product from breweries, can filter out even trace amounts of lead.
CSAIL scientists’ novel hardware attack against the Apple M1 chip defeats the last line of security while leaving no trace.
Jonathan Weissman and collaborators used their single-cell sequencing tool Perturb-seq on every expressed gene in the human genome, linking each to its job in the cell.
Studying a powerful type of cyberattack, researchers identified a flaw in how it’s been analyzed before, then developed new techniques that stop it in its tracks.
Two MIT professors and five alumni recognized for outstanding contributions to astronomy research, education, and communication.
Targeting these circuits could offer a new way to reverse motor dysfunction and depression in Parkinson’s patients.
A state-of-the-art facility replaces a nearly 80-year-old campus landmark to become the most advanced wind tunnel in U.S. academia.
MIT research highlights the opportunity to rethink global air quality guidelines.
Using Ecuador as case study, economists show international trade widens the income gap in individual countries.