The tenured engineers of 2024
Twelve faculty members have been granted tenure in six units across MIT’s School of Engineering.
Twelve faculty members have been granted tenure in six units across MIT’s School of Engineering.
These models, which can predict a patient’s race, gender, and age, seem to use those traits as shortcuts when making medical diagnoses.
Known for building connections between the social sciences, data science, and computation, the political science professor will lead IDSS into its next chapter.
This novel circuit architecture cancels out unwanted signals at the earliest opportunity.
MosaicML, co-founded by an MIT alumnus and a professor, made deep-learning models faster and more efficient. Its acquisition by Databricks broadened that mission.
The dedicated teacher and academic leader transformed research in computer architectures, parallel computing, and digital design, enabling faster and more efficient computation.
The program focused on AI in health care, drawing on Takeda’s R&D experience in drug development and MIT’s deep expertise in AI.
LLMs trained primarily on text can generate complex visual concepts through code with self-correction. Researchers used these illustrations to train an image-free computer vision system to recognize real photos.
The SPARROW algorithm automatically identifies the best molecules to test as potential new medicines, given the vast number of factors affecting each choice.
Combining natural language and programming, the method enables LLMs to solve numerical, analytical, and language-based tasks transparently.
The method uses language-based inputs instead of costly visual data to direct a robot through a multistep navigation task.
DenseAV, developed at MIT, learns to parse and understand the meaning of language just by watching videos of people talking, with potential applications in multimedia search, language learning, and robotics.
A class this semester challenged students to evaluate technologies to help MIT decarbonize — with implications for organizations across the globe.
In the new economics course 14.163 (Algorithms and Behavioral Science), students investigate the deployment of machine-learning tools and their potential to understand people, reduce bias, and improve society.
Smaller than a coin, this optical device could enable rapid prototyping on the go.