Q&A: “As long as you have a future, you can still change it”
MIT historian Tristan Brown describes how China’s feng shui legacy can help with confronting today’s climate challenges.
MIT historian Tristan Brown describes how China’s feng shui legacy can help with confronting today’s climate challenges.
The effort to accelerate climate work at the Institute adds to its leadership team.
Journalists covering key science issues around the globe will join the MIT community in August.
Project led by MIT economist Rob Townsend aims to help low- and middle-income countries assess and utilize new technologies to improve central banks’ functions.
A new study shows someone’s beliefs about an LLM play a significant role in the model’s performance and are important for how it is deployed.
Philosophy doctoral student Abe Mathew is both studying philosophy and questioning some of its deeply-held ideas.
School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences appoints new heads across multiple academic units.
The IDEAS Social Innovation Challenge helps students hone their entrepreneurship skills to create viable ventures for public good.
While women and men self-reported similar vaccination rates, unvaccinated women had less intention to get vaccinated than men.
During a recent history of technology symposium at MIT, participants shared exciting ideas about the future of their field.
MIT spinout SiTration looks to disrupt industries with a revolutionary process for recovering and extracting critical materials.
Rising superpowers like China are “cautious opportunists” in global institutions, and the U.S. should avoid overreaction, PhD student Raymond Wang argues.
The senior program and technical associate for the Community Services Office has been a supporter of the MIT community since he arrived on campus as a student.
Known for building connections between the social sciences, data science, and computation, the political science professor will lead IDSS into its next chapter.