Design is major stepping stone toward portable artificial-intelligence devices.
Miniaturized system could be used to treat neurological disorders that affect specific brain regions.
The unusual characteristics of these abundant, bacteria-killing viruses could lead to evolutionary insights.
New metal-mesh membrane could solve longstanding problems and lead to inexpensive power storage.
Theoretical study shows how to make wireless localization much more accurate.
AI platform allows chatbots to draw on robust language database to better navigate human conversation.
AP reporter Lauran Neergaard writes that MIT researchers have developed a hair-thin implant that can deliver medications to specific regions of the brain. Neergaard writes that the device, “could mark a new approach to treating brain diseases — potentially reducing side effects by targeting only the hard-to-reach circuits that need care.”
MIT researchers have designed a new chip that could advance the development of computers that operate like the human brain, reports James Vincent for The Verge. The development could, “lead to processors that run machine learning tasks with lower energy demands — up to 1,000 times less. This would enable us to give more devices AI abilities like voice and image recognition.”
Reporting for the PBS NewsHour, Nsikan Akpan spotlights Prof. Kripa Varanasi’s work developing the non-stick coating technology LiquiGlide. Akpan also examines how Varanasi’s group is studying how to, “stop clogs at desalination water facilities by observing how saltwater evaporates, or they’re keeping water from condensing on steam turbines to improve energy efficiency at power plants.”
A study co-authored by MIT researchers shows that as the sun loses mass its gravitational pull is becoming weaker, reports Kastalia Medrano for Newsweek. “The study demonstrates how making measurements of planetary orbit changes throughout the solar system opens the possibility of future discoveries about the nature of the sun and planets,” explains Maria Zuber, MIT’s vice president for research.
Professor of atmospheric chemistry honored for her contributions to atmospheric science.
A next-generation home for MIT undergraduates is underway.
ReACT will award credentials in computer and data science through online and in-person instruction.
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