Honoring work to support innovation in aging
MIT AgeLab co-hosts 10th anniversary celebration of Boston Bridge, a longtime collaborator offering development, networking, career growth, and mentorship in the field of aging.
MIT AgeLab co-hosts 10th anniversary celebration of Boston Bridge, a longtime collaborator offering development, networking, career growth, and mentorship in the field of aging.
Study indicates ailing neurons may instigate an inflammatory response from the brain’s microglia immune cells.
OMEGA scholarships encourage bonds between younger and older adults.
Mel King Community Fellows from MIT's Community Innovators Lab meet in Berlin to examine the German elder care model.
MIT alumni-founded WalkWise uses a motion-detecting device for walkers to allow family members and care professionals to monitor adults with mobility challenges.
Program supports family caregivers with dedicated service coordinators based on learning from MIT's AgeLab.
Targeting these circuits could offer a new way to reverse motor dysfunction and depression in Parkinson’s patients.
Projects from a new MIT urban studies and planning course speak to the impact of increased longevity on systems and markets.
Two types of tau proteins mix together in a nearly random way to generate the tangles seen in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients.
K. Lisa Yang Brain-Body Center to investigate the brain’s complex relationship with other body systems.
This circuit, which weakens with age, could offer a target to help prevent age-related decline in spatial memory.
Competitive seed grants launch yearlong investigations of novel hypotheses about potential causes, biomarkers, treatments of Alzheimer’s and ALS.
Extra chromosome alters chromosomal conformation and DNA accessibility in neural progenitor cells; study establishes senescence as a potentially targetable mechanism for future treatment.
MIT biologists show that enlargement of blood stem cells restricts their ability to generate new blood cells during aging.
The findings may help explain why some people who lead enriching lives are less prone to Alzheimer’s and age-related dementia.