Three from MIT named 2024-25 Goldwater Scholars
Undergraduates Ben Lou, Srinath Mahankali, and Kenta Suzuki, whose research explores math and physics, are honored for their academic excellence.
Undergraduates Ben Lou, Srinath Mahankali, and Kenta Suzuki, whose research explores math and physics, are honored for their academic excellence.
In a study of cells from nearly 400 ALS patients, researchers identified genomic regions with chemical modifications linked to disease progression.
The former EECS professor and RLE affiliate helped to develop a machine that read text out loud and won an Emmy for work on subtly speeding up film and audio without a noticeable loss of pitch.
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.
A lauded professor, theoretical physicist, and fusion scientist, Loureiro is keenly positioned to advance the center’s research and education goals.
Senior James Simon wants to effect change in two ways: by quantifying societal issues and working directly with disadvantaged communities.
At MIT’s Festival of Learning 2024, panelists stressed the importance of developing critical thinking skills while leveraging technologies like generative AI.
An expert in robotics and AI, Shah succeeds Steven Barrett at AeroAstro.
The acclaimed cellist and writer discussed his new memoir and reflected on a remarkable musical career.
Fellowship funds graduate studies for outstanding immigrants and children of immigrants.
Lydia Bourouiba’s research on fluid dynamics influenced new guidance from the World Health Organization that will shape how health agencies respond to respiratory infectious diseases.
Programming course for incarcerated people boosts digital literacy and self-efficacy, highlighting potential for reduced recidivism.
The grants fund studies of clean hydrogen production, fetal health-sensing fabric, basalt architecture, and shark-based ocean monitoring.
MIT researchers find circadian variations in liver function play an important role in how drugs are broken down in the body.