Starfish embryos swim in formation like a “living crystal”
Their swirling, clustering behavior might someday inform the design of self-assembling robotic swarms.
Their swirling, clustering behavior might someday inform the design of self-assembling robotic swarms.
Award provides five years of funding and access to a community of innovative scholars and leaders in science and technology.
Building and working a clay-and-grass furnace, teachers and students learn more than how to turn ore into metal.
Tenth anniversary of the program rewards three innovative projects.
Jonathan Weissman and collaborators used their single-cell sequencing tool Perturb-seq on every expressed gene in the human genome, linking each to its job in the cell.
Earning the top spot for the 11th straight year, the Institute also places first in 12 subject areas.
Twenty winning projects will link industry member priorities with research groups across campus to develop scalable climate solutions.
MIT cell biologist and computational neuroscientist recognized for their innovative research contributions.
Fellowship funds graduate studies at Stanford University.
Family trees of lung cancer cells reveal how cancer evolves from its earliest stages to an aggressive form capable of spreading throughout the body.
The 2nd Annual Research Slam featured three-minute talks on cutting-edge research from across MIT in an engaging public showcase and competition.
Innovative brain-wide mapping study shows that an “engram,” the ensemble of neurons encoding a memory, is widely distributed and includes regions not previously realized.
A Climate Grand Challenges flagship project aims to reduce agriculture-driven emissions while making food crop plants heartier and more nutritious.
Seven staff members are recognized for their dedication to the School of Science and to MIT.
The Institute also ranks second in two subject areas.