MIT alumni are helping build a better MBTA— reshaping route planning, improving service, and supporting the workforce that ...
In pet genetics, cancer research, and beyond, Charlie Lieu, MBA ’05, SM ’05, has spent her career harnessing massive data ...
Therapeutic antibodies packaged into microparticles could be delivered with a standard syringe, avoiding the need for lengthy ...
MIT is family to Chuck Staples ’59. His father and brother were alumni, as is his grandson. His late wife, Katherine ...
For generations, MIT has trained the experts who help drive progress. Whether they work at the scale of nanotechnology or ...
The new design could be adapted to sort warehouse products, unload heavy cargo, or help lift patients out of bed.
Nanoparticles coated with the molecular sensors could be used in at-home diagnostics. Researchers at MIT and Microsoft have ...
Networking can be difficult in supply chain careers, especially for women. Liz Raman-Grubbs, MASc ’20, hopes to help leaders ...
Aero-astro major Ezra Eyre ’26 spends a lot of time in MIT makerspaces—for classes, UROPs, the MIT Rocket Team, and sometimes ...
He is a veteran broadcaster—years ago he hosted a radio show in Connecticut, where he says he “learned to make a fool of ...
It’s amazing what a little light can do. Chemist Simon Friedman ’89 is using it in a system he hopes will help some of the 589 million people around the world who are living with diabetes.
MIT pioneered the undergraduate research program in 1969. Today, research is an essential element of the undergrad experience ...