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November 16, 2024
Greetings! Here’s a roundup of the latest from the MIT community.
 
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Exercising Neurons
Two textured green balls have a purple center.
In response to biochemical and physical cues from exercise, motor neurons (in purple) exhibit faster new growth (in green) than neurons that aren’t exposed to exercise.
Exercise does a body good, strengthening muscles and bolstering bones, blood vessels, and the immune system. Now, MIT engineers have found that exercise can also have a significant biochemical effect on the growth of individual neurons.
Top Headlines
Admir Masic: Using lessons from the past to build a better future
The associate professor of civil and environmental engineering studies ancient materials while working to solve modern problems.
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MIT engineers make converting CO2 into useful products more practical
A new electrode design boosts the efficiency of electrochemical reactions that turn carbon dioxide into ethylene and other products.
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Samurai in Japan, then engineers at MIT
A new exhibit explores the Institute’s first Japanese students, who arrived as MIT was taking flight and their own country was opening up.
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Graph-based AI model maps the future of innovation
An AI method developed by Professor Markus Buehler finds hidden links between science and art to suggest novel materials.
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A portable light system that can digitize everyday objects
A new design tool uses UV and RGB lights to change the color and textures of everyday objects. The system could enable surfaces to display dynamic patterns, such as health data and fashion designs.
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Startup turns mining waste into critical metals for the U.S.
Phoenix Tailings, co-founded by MIT alumni, is creating domestic supply chains for rare earth metals, key to the clean energy transition.
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#ThisisMIT
 Instagram pic of light seen through a hallway crowded with people. Text via @physicsmit Twice a year, in mid-November and in late January, the position of the sun causes sunlight to stream down the entire 251-meter (823 ft) length of the Infinite Corridor. Named MIThenge, the event is celebrated by students, faculty, and staff, as you can see by the crowds depicted. Thanks to Orisvaldo Salviano Neto '23 for sharing this video of last weekend's Fall 2024 MIThenge.
In the Media
Opinion: Boston needs to reexamine school assignment system // The Boston Globe
Professors Joshua Angrist and Parag Pathak and Senior Policy Associate Amanda Schmidt of MIT’s Blueprint Labs examine the effectiveness of Boston’s school assignment system and transportation policy.
MIT maps how the brain experiences movies // Popular Science
MIT researchers have created a detailed map showing how the human brain processes information while watching movies.
AI helps robot dogs navigate the real world // New Scientist
Researchers at MIT developed a virtual training program for four-legged robots by taking a popular computer simulation software that follows the principles of real-world physics and inserting a generative AI model to produce artificial environments.
Remembering New England’s trailblazing Black military meteorologist // WCVB-TV 
WCVB-TV spotlights Captain Wallace Patillo Reed ’42, a “meteorologist whose barrier-breaking work allowed pilots to land and dreams to take off.”
Tournament Tiddlywinks
Monochromatic image of two MIT students looking at coin-sized discs and cup.
No mere child’s play, tiddlywinks can be fiercely competitive — and MIT alumni have been at the highest ranks of the game for decades. “There’s a lot of strategy involved,” says Larry Kahn ’75, SM ’76, who holds 24 world championship titles in singles competition and 20 in pairs.
Meet Your MIT Neighbor
Sonia Boor headshot
Name: Sonia Boor
Affiliation: Postdoc at the Whitehead Institute, in the lab of Professor Mary Gehring
What is your current research focus? I’m working with a legume called pigeon pea, which is an underutilized crop. Pigeon pea provides a key source of nutrition for about a billion people worldwide, particularly in regions with higher levels of food insecurity … but there isn’t much known about it. My project is trying to increase the genetic diversity of pigeon pea.
How did you become interested in a research career? When I was in graduate school, the climate crisis was just getting worse, and I felt compelled to put my molecular biology skills towards addressing that. That’s what led me to plant biology.
Any hobbies? I read and listen to audiobooks. I also like to run, which is when I do a lot of my audiobook listening. I mostly do distance running, like marathons and half marathons. I want to do all of the six marathon majors: Boston, New York, Chicago, Tokyo, London, and Berlin.
Full interview via Whitehead Institute
Watch This
Jennifer Yang pours a small beaker with liquid into a mixed drink next to a large pitcher shaped like an Erlenmeyer flask and a bottle of vodka.
Jennifer Yang ’97 channels her creativity and love for science into her passion: making spirits. As co-founder of Covalent Spirits, Yang manages operations at the craft distillery and develops drinks, mixers, and syrups. Much like in chemistry, Yang hopes to cultivate bonds in the covalent spirit and believes that “the best bonds you can have with someone is by sharing something.”
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