MIT affiliates named 2024 HHMI Investigators
Four faculty members and four others with MIT ties are recognized for pushing the boundaries of science and for creating highly inclusive and collaborative research environments.
Four faculty members and four others with MIT ties are recognized for pushing the boundaries of science and for creating highly inclusive and collaborative research environments.
Custom plates display expressions of scholarship, creativity, and MIT pride among Institute affiliates.
Through academia and industry, Gevorg Grigoryan PhD ’07 says there is no right path — just the path that works for you.
A new gene-silencing tool shows promise as a future therapy against prion diseases and paves the way for new approaches to treating disease.
Known for her rigorous approach to science and her influential research, Pardue paved the way for women in science at MIT and beyond.
A newly described technology improves the clarity and speed of using two-photon microscopy to image synapses in the living brain.
New camera chip design allows for optimizing each pixel’s timing to maximize signal-to-noise ratio when tracking real-time visual indicator of neural voltage.
In “Scientific InQueery,” LGBTQ+ MIT faculty and graduate students describe finding community and living their authentic lives in the research enterprise.
Co-hosted by the McGovern Institute, MIT Open Learning, and others, the symposium stressed emerging technologies in advancing understanding of mental health and neurological conditions.
Second annual assembly, sponsored by the Department of Biology and Picower Institute, invited postdocs from across the country to meet with faculty, present their work to the MIT community, and build relationships.
The Building 68 manager’s leadership, innovation, and laid-back attitude have helped to build a strong culture of community.
By capturing short-lived RNA molecules, scientists can map relationships between genes and the regulatory elements that control them.
Ranking at the top for the 13th year in a row, the Institute also places first in 11 subject areas.
The fellowships provide five years of funding to doctoral students in applied science, engineering, and mathematics who have “the extraordinary creativity and principled leadership necessary to tackle problems others can’t solve.”
An atlas of human protein kinases enables scientists to map cell signaling pathways with unprecedented speed and detail.