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Ultra-low-power sensors carrying genetically engineered bacteria can detect gastric bleeding.
Autonomous glider can fly like an albatross, cruise like a sailboat.
Study tracks eye movement to determine how well people understand English as a foreign language.
Startup develops implantable, encased cells that live in the body and secrete insulin and other therapeutics.
With new system, drones navigate through an empty room, avoiding crashes while “seeing” a virtual world.
Nanoparticles could offer a new way to help eradicate the disease worldwide.
MIT researchers have developed an ingestible capsule that uses genetically engineered bacteria to detect potential health problems, reports Carla Johnson for the Associated Press. The researchers hope the capsule could eventually be used to, “find signs of ulcers, inflammatory bowel disease or even colon cancer.”
During this episode of NOVA Wonders, Professors Kristala Jones Prather and Kevin Esvelt discuss the future of genetic engineering. Speaking about the evolution of the biotech industry, Prather explains that, "the key observation that really fueled the entire biotech industry was recognizing that D.N.A. is really just a chemical, and the structure is what matters.”
NASA’s planet-hunting satellite TESS has “snapped its first test shot — an incredibly clear, star-studded image centered on the Southern constellation of Centaurus,” writes Bruce Dorminey for Forbes. “We are truly excited about how well the TESS cameras are working,” said George Ricker, the mission’s principal investigator and a senior research scientist at MIT’s Kavli Institute.
At flagship Solve event, Canada’s prime minister urges audience to help shape the changes transforming society.
Graduating students and alumni will conduct research abroad in 2018-19 academic year.
Tchelet Segev, a senior in civil and environmental engineering, is making a better world at MIT and beyond through leadership and service.
In a tradition that started nearly 50 years ago, Baker House residents drop a donated, nonworking, and irreparable piano off the roof to mark “Drop Day.”
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