Powering the future in Mongolia
Through coursework, intercollegiate collaboration, and a site visit, MIT students fuse engineering and anthropology to propose innovative energy solutions.
Through coursework, intercollegiate collaboration, and a site visit, MIT students fuse engineering and anthropology to propose innovative energy solutions.
The inaugural SERC Symposium convened experts from multiple disciplines to explore the challenges and opportunities that arise with the broad applicability of computing in many aspects of society.
Hosted by MIT Literature Lecturer Michael Lutz, early episodes feature guests Malka Older, Wyn Kelley, and more.
Philosophy PhD student Eliza Wells investigates how our social roles influence our moral lives.
Whether learning about new music or a new culture, PhD student Jamie Wong takes a similar approach: Seek out the experts, then “try to play along and keep up.”
Tenth anniversary of the program rewards three innovative projects.
Natural world philosophies are a source of solutions.
Twenty winning projects will link industry member priorities with research groups across campus to develop scalable climate solutions.
The MIT anthropologist is recognized for interdisciplinary work on health, climate, and equity.
The NCSOFT-sponsored program will advance cutting-edge technologies for gaming and data visualization.
MIT anthropologist discusses her new book on ruderal ecologies, her environmental justice class — and how societies can expand their "imagination for how to live otherwise."
HASTS PhD student Rijul Kochhar tracks changing medical and microbial realities, and examines what they portend for society.
The findings include signs of flash flooding that carried huge boulders downstream into the lakebed.
A storytelling project by Christine Walley and Chris Boebel explores the social impacts of late 20th century deindustrialization.
Experiment with Facebook-flagged content shows groups of laypeople reliably rate stories as effectively as fact-checkers do.