Research Stories
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Fluorescent probe could allow scientists to watch circuits within the brain and link their activity to specific behaviors.
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Studying a common material at room temperature, researchers bring quantum behavior “closer to our daily life.”
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The technology, first developed at Lincoln Laboratory, is now licensed and will soon be tested to screen passersby in sports stadiums.
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Connected devices can now share position information, even in noisy, GPS-denied areas.
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RFID-based devices work in indoor and outdoor lighting conditions, and communicate at greater distances.
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Researchers integrate diamond-based sensing components onto a chip to enable low-cost, high-performance quantum hardware.
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CSAIL system uses a patient’s ECG signal to estimate potential for cardiovascular death.
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Nearly 30 MIT-affiliated researchers will share in the prize, while David Jay Julius ’77 wins Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences; assistant professor of physics Max Metlitski shares New Horizons prize with Xie Chen PhD ’12…
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System could help with diagnosing and treating noncommunicative patients.
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Filaments with embedded circuitry can be used to print complex shapes for biomedical and robotic devices.