Enhancing the future of teaching and learning at MIT
The MIT Festival of Learning sparked discussions on better integrating a sense of purpose and social responsibility into hands-on education.
The MIT Festival of Learning sparked discussions on better integrating a sense of purpose and social responsibility into hands-on education.
MIT historian Robin Scheffler’s research shows how local regulations helped create certainty and safety principles that enabled an industry’s massive growth.
A new method from the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab helps large language models to steer their own responses toward safer, more ethical, value-aligned outputs.
Associate Professor Dwai Banerjee examines topics ranging from cancer care to the history of computing.
The Tactile Vega-Lite system, developed at MIT CSAIL, streamlines the tactile chart design process; could help educators efficiently create these graphics and aid designers in making precise changes.
As artificial intelligence develops, we must ask vital questions about ourselves and our society, Ben Vinson III contends in the 2025 Compton Lecture.
Conference at MIT brings together scientific experts and communicators to discuss the path toward a more informed, science-supportive public.
Felice Frankel discusses the implications of generative AI when communicating science visually.
A first history of the document security technology, co-authored by MIT Libraries’ Jana Dambrogio, provides new tools for interdisciplinary research.
Engineers developed a planning tool that can help independent entities decide when they should invest in joint projects.
MIT researchers developed a fiber computer and networked several of them into a garment that learns to identify physical activities.
In a new MIT course co-taught by EECS and philosophy professors, students tackle moral dilemmas of the digital age.
The consortium will bring researchers and industry together to focus on impact.
MIT study finds a diversified portfolio of carbon dioxide removal options delivers the best return on investment.
With seven new startups, MIT.nano's program for hard-tech ventures expands to more than 20 companies.