Immune System Discovery |
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Researchers have found a surprising new role for a major immune regulator: In addition to turning on genes involved in cell defense, the STING protein also acts as an ion channel, allowing it to control a wide variety of immune responses.
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Using AI to protect against AI image manipulation
“PhotoGuard,” developed by MIT CSAIL researchers, prevents unauthorized image manipulation, safeguarding authenticity in the era of advanced generative models.
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Q&A: Alexey Makarin on why social media harms youth mental health
The MIT professor discusses the US surgeon general’s recent advisory and why scrolling social media can lead to depression and anxiety.
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Moving days for MIT’s history
The MIT Museum is preparing to transfer its enormous collection — and making a few surprising discoveries along the way.
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AI model can help determine where a patient’s cancer arose
Predictions from the OncoNPC model could enable doctors to choose targeted treatments for difficult-to-treat tumors.
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Unlocking age-old secrets set in stone
“I love breaking people’s misconceptions about geology,” says rising senior Becca Mastrola.
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Energy-storing concrete could form foundations for solar-powered homes // New Scientist
MIT engineers uncovered a way to create an energy supercapacitor — by combining cement, carbon black, and water — that could one day be used to power homes or electric vehicles.
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The most surprising discoveries in physics // Scientific American
Professor Janet Conrad and Associate Professor Tracy Slatyer discuss their favorite physics discoveries.
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Opinion: Welcome to a world where AI can value your home // Financial Times
“To train a real estate bot, our lab at MIT used pictures of 20,000 houses around Boston, as well as data that measured how their prices changed over time,” writes professor of the practice Carlo Ratti.
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Secrets of the early universe are hidden in this chill galaxy cluster // Popular Science
Astronomers from MIT and elsewhere recently captured views of a galaxy cluster as it existed when it was 5 billion years old, and found it is one of the few relaxed galaxy clusters from that time period in the cosmos.
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“Long Division: The Persistence of Race Science” is a multipart series from Undark, an independent digital magazine published by the Knight Science Journalism Fellowship Program at MIT within the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences. “We believe that one of the most important things that journalists do is shine light into the shadowy corners of who we are. And that stands for science journalism as well,” says Deborah Blum, director of KSJ at MIT. “The Long Division project and its deeply reported investigation of the legacy of race science … is one of the most important subjects we’ve taken on.” The series was a 2023 National Magazine Award finalist and received a first place award in the category of digital publication features from the National Association of Black Journalists.
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Sirma Orguc SM ’16, PhD ’21, a postdoc in the MIT Institute for Medical Engineering and Science, uses computational neuroscience to probe the brain for clues on its function. She’s inspired by the MIT community’s “great energy for science [and] great motivation to contribute to important problems that our society faces.”
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Travelers making their way through the Tampa International Airport in Florida won’t soon forget a current installation by Matthew Mazzotta SM ’09, who earned a master of science degree in visual studies at MIT. “Home,” a floor-to-ceiling lifelike flamingo, was recently profiled by Colossal and selected as one of the CODAawards’ top 100 displays integrating commissioned art into an interior, architectural, or public space.
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