Four Lincoln Laboratory technologies win five 2023 R&D 100 awards
Inventions in medical imaging, aircrew scheduling, data security, and quantum networking are named among the year’s most innovative new products.
Inventions in medical imaging, aircrew scheduling, data security, and quantum networking are named among the year’s most innovative new products.
Developed by MIT researchers, BrightMarkers are invisible fluorescent tags embedded in physical objects to enhance motion tracking, virtual reality, and object detection.
Researchers create a privacy technique that protects sensitive data while maintaining a machine-learning model’s performance.
Abel Sanchez helps industries and executives shift their operations in order to make sense of their data and use it to help their bottom lines.
The system analyzes the likelihood that an attacker could thwart a certain security scheme to steal secret information.
Fake seeds can cost farmers more than two-thirds of expected crop yields and threaten food security. Trackable silk labels could help.
In MIT’s 2023 Killian Lecture, Peter Shor shares a brief history of quantum computing from a personal viewpoint.
Cloud security and video forensics software have been transitioned to end users.
New research enables users to search for information without revealing their queries, based on a method that is 30 times faster than comparable prior techniques.
In the fight against escalating cybercrime, boards need to deepen their cybersecurity competencies, explains Keri Pearlson, executive director of Cybersecurity at MIT Sloan.
Hackathon explores policy solutions to challenges in cybersecurity, environmental justice, and city planning focused on post-pandemic efforts to build a better society.
James Rice discusses supply chain resilience and how organizations can prepare for the next big problem.
MIT alumnus-founded Metrika has developed a suite of analytics tools giving blockchain communities visibility into their networks.
MIT professor to share $3 million prize with three others; Daniel Spielman PhD ’95 wins Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics.
Technologies recognized with "Oscars of Innovation" transform hurricane tracking, electronics cooling, collision avoidance, cybersecurity, and more.