Vivienne Sze shares Engineering Emmy Award with colleagues
Associate professor of electrical engineering and computer science was part of a group that earned acclaim for work on a new video compression standard.
Associate professor of electrical engineering and computer science was part of a group that earned acclaim for work on a new video compression standard.
MISTI media contest showcases MIT students working to build a better world.
CSAIL’s machine-learning system enables smoother streaming that can better adapt to different network conditions.
CSAIL system converts 3-D movies into a more TV-friendly format.
The Department of Mechanical Engineering's “Water Is Life” and MIT Video Productions' “A Bold Move” take home top honors in separate categories.
Technique that reduces video files to one-tenth their initial size enables speedy analysis of laparoscopic procedures.
Prototype display enables viewers to watch a 3-D movie from any seat in a theater.
A new season of "Science Out Loud," produced by MIT students and alumni, brings the Institute's pK-12 vision to the public.
MIT.nano is one of the most ambitious — and challenging — construction projects in Institute history. Why did we make it so hard for ourselves?
Exploiting video game software yields broadcast-quality 3-D video of soccer games in real time.
Company’s more-efficient captioning system processes hundreds of video-hours per day.
Students create and screen their creations in the second annual Course 1 Video Competition.
Award honors work on real-time energy-efficient visual data processing for portable media, which will impact elderly-assistance and advanced driver-assistance systems.
Real-life examples are relevant to MIT students and students around the world.
Algorithm can determine, with 80 percent accuracy, whether video is running forward or backward.