Cognitive scientists develop new model explaining difficulty in language comprehension
Built on recent advances in machine learning, the model predicts how well individuals will produce and comprehend sentences.
Built on recent advances in machine learning, the model predicts how well individuals will produce and comprehend sentences.
Groundbreaking research can help alleviate the challenges affiliated with studying carbohydrates.
Using this approach, researchers can map how light spreads in opaque environments.
MIT researchers are discovering which parts of the brain are engaged when a person evaluates a computer program.
Popular stories this year covered the detection of radio signals from space, a new battery design, immigrants’ entrepreneurial activity, and more.
Study suggests a robot levy — but only a modest one — could help combat the effects of automation on income inequality in the U.S.
Unique PSFC-designed spectrometer provides crucial data about the implosion that yielded an historic fusion energy gain.
But the harm from a discriminatory AI system can be minimized if the advice it delivers is properly framed, an MIT team has shown.
Research shows doctors and their families are less likely to follow guidelines about medicine. Why do the medically well-informed comply less often?
MIT researchers report early-stage clinical study results of tests with noninvasive 40-hertz light and sound treatment.
Fortifying foods with new polymer particles containing vitamin A could promote better vision and health for millions of people.
The new design works with the diaphragm to improve breathing.
Harnessing these protective molecules may offer a new way to treat the disease, which spreads through contaminated water.
This year's fellows will work across research areas including telemonitoring, human-computer interactions, operations research, AI-mediated socialization, and chemical transformations.
Current measurements of black holes are not enough to nail down how the invisible giants form in the universe, researchers say.