The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City is one of the best shows on television right now. Not one of the best reality TV shows, ...
Crime changes. The goals stay the same—pursuit of value, pursuit of power—but new technologies create new vulnerabilities, ...
A New England artist makes music from the imperceptible noises of nature—using tools that usually detect hidden nuclear ...
Therapeutic antibodies packaged into microparticles could be delivered with a standard syringe, avoiding the need for lengthy ...
It’s amazing what a little light can do. Chemist Simon Friedman ’89 is using it in a system he hopes will help some of the 589 million people around the world who are living with diabetes.
Networking can be difficult in supply chain careers, especially for women. Liz Raman-Grubbs, MASc ’20, hopes to help leaders ...
MIT pioneered the undergraduate research program in 1969. Today, research is an essential element of the undergrad experience ...
Inspired by the Japanese art of kirigami, an MIT team has designed a technique that could transform flat panels into medical devices, habitats, and other objects without the use of tools.
Stimulating the liver to generate signals normally produced by the thymus can reverse age-related declines in T-cell populations.
Aero-astro major Ezra Eyre ’26 spends a lot of time in MIT makerspaces—for classes, UROPs, the MIT Rocket Team, and sometimes ...
MIT alumni are helping build a better MBTA— reshaping route planning, improving service, and supporting the workforce that ...
In pet genetics, cancer research, and beyond, Charlie Lieu, MBA ’05, SM ’05, has spent her career harnessing massive data ...
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