3Q: Sarah Williams on mapping urban transport
Digitally mapping informal transportation networks in developing cities can help them reach the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals.
Digitally mapping informal transportation networks in developing cities can help them reach the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals.
Visiting fellows engage with students in the School of Architecture and Planning to create startups aimed at social impact.
Researchers design a negotiation strategy to help cities and organizations minimize losses when their data are held hostage.
Symposium speakers describe how colleges must meet the challenges of a rapidly emerging environment in which "computing is for everyone."
DUSP student will pursue an advanced degree in educational policy at Cambridge University.
More than 100 middle school students compete at the fourth Northeast Regional Science Bowl, hosted by students at MIT and sponsored by the School of Science.
“We see an incredible future where the College of Computing channels the collaborative potential of disciplines,” says grad student Matthew Claudel.
New prize honors legendary developer and philanthropist Norman B. Leventhal.
Professors Cullen Buie, Hadley Sikes, and Justin Steil are honored with the Committed to Caring Award.
Moods expressed on social media tend to decline when air pollution gets worse, study finds.
Noted urban anthropologist in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning championed advocacy and social change.
Students in the MIT Energy Initiative Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program build professional skills.
Community-driven selection of project architect opens opportunities to imagine new life for historic building as future home for School of Architecture and Planning.
Forbes calls its 2019 30 Under 30 honorees “a collection of bold risk-takers who are putting a new twist on the old tools of the trade.”
Merging different types of location-stamped data can make it easier to discern users’ identities, even when the data is anonymized.