Student-led conference charts the future of micro- and nanoscale research, reinforces scientific community
19th Microsystems Annual Research Conference reveals the next era of microsystems technologies, along with skiing and a dance party.
19th Microsystems Annual Research Conference reveals the next era of microsystems technologies, along with skiing and a dance party.
The chip, which can decipher any encoded signal, could enable lower-cost devices that perform better while requiring less hardware.
The receiver chip efficiently blocks signal interference that slows device performance and drains batteries.
A wireless technique enables a super-cold quantum computer to send and receive data without generating too much error-causing heat.
Annual award honors early-career researchers for creativity, innovation, and research accomplishments.
Seven researchers, along with 14 additional MIT alumni, are honored for significant contributions to engineering research, practice, and education.
The method enables a model to determine its confidence in a prediction, while using no additional data and far fewer computing resources than other methods.
MIT spinout Verta offers tools to help companies introduce, monitor, and manage machine-learning models safely and at scale.
“Squeezing” noise over a broad frequency bandwidth in a quantum system could lead to faster and more accurate quantum measurements.
A new study shows how large language models like GPT-3 can learn a new task from just a few examples, without the need for any new training data.
A new tool brings the benefits of AI programming to a much broader class of problems.
Growing from a strong foundation built at MIT CSAIL and other academic hosts, W3C will continue its mission of developing standards for an open and equitable web.
Six distinguished scientists with ties to MIT were recognized for significant contributions to computing systems.
When she’s not analyzing data about her favorite biomolecule, senior Sherry Nyeo focuses on improving the undergraduate experience at MIT.
Passionate about creating educational opportunities in India, PhD student Siddhartha Jayanti recently explored multiprocessor speed limits, in a paper written in the Indian language Telugu.