Studying phages far from home
Biology graduate student Tong Zhang has spent the last two years learning the intricacies of how bacteria protect themselves.
Biology graduate student Tong Zhang has spent the last two years learning the intricacies of how bacteria protect themselves.
The Priscilla King Gray Public Service Center's IDEAS program empowers teams partnering with communities to tackle a range of social challenges.
Recipients Luis Antonio Benítez, Carolina Cuesta-Lazaro, and Fernando Romero López receive support for their scientific research.
Catalyst Symposium is part of an effort to bring outstanding postdocs from underrepresented backgrounds in science to engage with MIT community members.
As Canada’s wildfires continue to be felt downwind, MIT experts weigh in on what to expect in the coming months, with wildfire season underway.
By applying a language model to protein-drug interactions, researchers can quickly screen large libraries of potential drug compounds.
Symposium speakers describe numerous ways to promote prevention, resilience, healing, and wellness after early-life stresses.
All together, a core group of MIT.nano staffers has more than 400 years of technical experience in nanoscale characterization and fabrication.
Physicist Daniel Harlow explores an alternate quantum reality in search of fundamental truths to our physical universe.
Forty-one women were selected as 2023 MIT Graduate Women of Excellence, organized by the MIT Office of Graduate Education.
Tactile stimulation improved motor performance, reduced phosphorylated tau, preserved neurons and synapses, and reduced DNA damage, a new study shows.
Using insights into how people intuit others’ emotions, researchers have designed a model that approximates this aspect of human social intelligence.
Community members provide unique views of MIT’s graduation ceremonies through Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.
A study inspired by the Japanese paper-cutting art provides a blueprint for designing shape-shifting materials and devices.
A series of numbers describes the career of Professor Gil Strang as he retires from MIT after six highly influential decades on the faculty.