New treatment could reverse hair loss caused by an autoimmune skin disease
A microneedle patch that delivers immune-regulating molecules can teach T cells not to attack hair follicles, helping hair to regrow.
A microneedle patch that delivers immune-regulating molecules can teach T cells not to attack hair follicles, helping hair to regrow.
The results suggest that climate may influence seismic activity.
New “AI Comes Out of the Closet” system seeks to merge artificial intelligence and LGBTQIA+ support.
Jonathan Bessette and Akash Ball have been named 2024-25 J-WAFS Fellows for water treatment technologies.
MIT CSAIL and Project CETI researchers reveal complex communication patterns in sperm whales, deepening our understanding of animal language systems.
Researchers engineered a hair-thin fabric to create a lightweight, compact, and efficient mechanism to reduce noise transmission in a large room.
The observations suggest some of earliest “monster” black holes grew from massive cosmic seeds.
Together, the Hasso Plattner Institute and MIT are working toward novel solutions to the world’s problems as part of the Designing for Sustainability research program.
The MIT EC^3 Hub, an outgrowth of the MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub, will develop multifunctional concrete applications for infrastructure.
The technique opens possibilities for exploring exotic states of matter and building new quantum materials.
In a study of cells from nearly 400 ALS patients, researchers identified genomic regions with chemical modifications linked to disease progression.
MICRO internship program expands, brings undergraduate interns from other schools to campus.
Three neurosymbolic methods help language models find better abstractions within natural language, then use those representations to execute complex tasks.
“We need more scientists who can explain their work clearly, explain science to the public, and help us build a science-literate world.”
A new framework describes how thought arises from the coordination of neural activity driven by oscillating electric fields — a.k.a. brain “waves” or “rhythms.”