A novel combination therapy for treating vancomycin-resistant bacterial infections
Developed at SMART, the therapy stimulates the host immune system to more effectively clear bacterial infections and accelerate infected wound healing.
Developed at SMART, the therapy stimulates the host immune system to more effectively clear bacterial infections and accelerate infected wound healing.
Computational tool from MIT CSAIL enables color-changing cellulose-based designs for data visualization, education, fashion, and more.
Fake seeds can cost farmers more than two-thirds of expected crop yields and threaten food security. Trackable silk labels could help.
New LiGO technique accelerates training of large machine-learning models, reducing the monetary and environmental cost of developing AI applications.
The teams will work toward sustainable microchips and topological materials as well as socioresilient materials design.
Drawing inspiration from butterfly wings, reflective fibers woven into clothing could reshape textile sorting and recycling.
J-WAFS researchers are using remote sensing observations to build high-resolution systems to monitor drought.
Project will develop new materials characterization tools and technologies to assign unique identifiers to individual pearls.
Work with skyrmions could have applications in future computers and more.
Open-source tool from MIT’s Senseable City Lab lets people check air quality, cheaply.
A new system enables makers to incorporate sensors into gears and other rotational mechanisms with just one pass in a 3D printer.
Using this approach, researchers hope to deliver therapeutic RNA molecules selectively to cancer cells or other target cells.
New repair techniques enable microscale robots to recover flight performance after suffering severe damage to the artificial muscles that power their wings.
Careful planning of charging station placement could lessen or eliminate the need for new power plants, a new study shows.
Most cities don’t map their own pedestrian networks. Now, researchers have built the first open-source tool to let planners do just that.