Kimberly Rose Bennett awarded HHMI Gilliam Fellowship
Howard Hughes Medical Institute Gilliam Fellows are selected for their promise as future leaders in their scientific fields and for their commitment to advancing equity and inclusion.
Howard Hughes Medical Institute Gilliam Fellows are selected for their promise as future leaders in their scientific fields and for their commitment to advancing equity and inclusion.
Mathias Kolle’s color-changing materials take inspiration from butterflies and mollusks.
A biotech entrepreneur, Koehler will help faculty and students launch startups and bring new products to market through the MIT Deshpande Center for Technological Innovation.
A pilot-scale system, enabled by an $82 million award from the FDA, aims to accelerate the development and production of mRNA technologies.
A record-breaking number of presenters flock to the MIT event’s poster competition; topics range from synthetic mucus to nature-inspired design.
Award honors researchers who “have had a direct impact on business and industry through their scientific achievements and contributions.”
The illustrious prize supports early-career scientists and engineers as they pursue interdisciplinary work.
Matt Shoulders will lead an interdisciplinary team to improve RuBisCO — the photosynthesis enzyme thought to be the holy grail for improving agricultural yield.
A campus summit with the leader and his delegation centered around dialogue on biotechnology and innovation ecosystems.
Developed at SMART, the device can deliver controlled amounts of agrochemicals to specific plant tissues for research and could one day be used to improve crop quality and disease management.
Researchers develop new, patient-friendly hydrogel platform for administering lifesaving biologics.
With further development, the programmable system could be used in a range of applications including gene and cancer therapies.
The associate professor of MechE reflects on how his company, Kytopen, has grown and shifted focus in developing safer immunotherapies.
When she’s not analyzing data about her favorite biomolecule, senior Sherry Nyeo focuses on improving the undergraduate experience at MIT.
A new computational framework could help researchers design granular hydrogels to repair or replace diseased tissues.