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.
Undergraduate research projects show how students are advancing research in human and artificial intelligence, and applying intelligence tools to other disciplines.
Researchers have devised a faster, more efficient way to design custom peptides and perturb protein-protein interactions.
Climate-driven changes in phytoplankton communities will intensify the blue and green regions of the world’s oceans.
Machine-learning approach could help robots assemble cellphones and other small parts in a manufacturing line.
An algorithm that teaches robot agents how to exchange advice to complete a task helps them learn faster.
Hackathons promote doctor-data scientist collaboration and expanded access to electronic medical-records to improve patient care.
New EAPS thesis field is the most recent to join the computational science and engineering doctoral program within the Center for Computational Engineering.
MIT’s Mark Vogelsberger and the Illustris project are honored by Germany's postal service with an official stamp.
PhD candidate seeks to discover how heat leaks from fusion plasmas.
Advances in computer vision inspired by human physiological and anatomical constraints are improving pattern completion in machines.
FinTech@CSAIL industry collaboration will work to improve business models, access to data, and security in the finance sector.
Through meticulous computations, nuclear science and engineering student Etienne Demarly simulates conditions inside a nuclear reactor.
Improved design may be used for exploring disaster zones and other dangerous or inaccessible environments.
Graduate student Tiziana Smith studies links between water availability and crop yields in the world’s most populous country.