MIT engineers find a way to protect microbes from extreme conditions
By helping microbes withstand industrial processing, the method could make it easier to harness the benefits of microorganisms used as medicines and in agriculture.
By helping microbes withstand industrial processing, the method could make it easier to harness the benefits of microorganisms used as medicines and in agriculture.
A national bottle deposit fee could make a dramatic difference in reducing plastic waste, MIT researchers report.
Rising superpowers like China are “cautious opportunists” in global institutions, and the U.S. should avoid overreaction, PhD student Raymond Wang argues.
The new design approach could be used to produce metals with exceptional combinations of strength and ductility, for aerospace and other applications.
This tiny, biocompatible sensor may overcome one of the biggest hurdles that prevent the devices from being completely implanted.
A new surgical procedure gives people more neural feedback from their residual limb. With it, seven patients walked more naturally and navigated obstacles.
The newly synthesized material could be the basis for wearable thermoelectric and spintronic devices.
These models, which can predict a patient’s race, gender, and age, seem to use those traits as shortcuts when making medical diagnoses.
Using this new approach, researchers could develop drug compounds with unique pharmaceutical properties.
A new gene-silencing tool shows promise as a future therapy against prion diseases and paves the way for new approaches to treating disease.
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.
New findings could help engineers design materials for light and heat management.
The building will serve as a hub for research on the development of immunology-based treatments.
MIT researchers find wave activity on Saturn’s largest moon may be strong enough to erode the coastlines of lakes and seas.