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MIT in the Media
The following news clips about MIT, updated on a regular basis, are just a partial selection of our most recent media coverage.
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Scientific American,
July 8, 2011
"Geoffrey von Maltzahn and coworkers have designed a two-part system consisting of specialized nanoparticles that communicate with each other to amplify the delivery of drugs to sites of disease."
Popular Science,
July 7, 2011
"The result: a pair of glasses that deciphers what a person is feeling and transmit that meaning to the person wearing them."
Boston Herald,
July 8, 2011
"The 'Connected States of America' project, which is based on aggregated, anonymous cell phone data from July 2010, shows how Americans’ mobile communications define new communities that go beyond traditional city and state boundaries."
Boston Globe,
July 7, 2011
"It may be known for its cutting edge technology and MIT, but for one wild turkey and its babies, Cambridge’s Kendall Square is home."
Scientific American,
July 7, 2011
"Why do chameleons change color? Can lightning follow a trail of water? Why do we go in the basement during a tornado? How do those guys karate-chop planks of wood without breaking their hand?"
WSJ Health Blog,
July 7, 2011
"A new research paper gives the clearest answer yet to a key question: how are people affected by gaining health insurance?"
Slate,
July 7, 2011
"As with many aspects of the ACA, the effect of insuring millions of poor Americans represents a leap into the unknown."
The Wall Street Journal,
July 6, 2011
"These foreigners, academics and journalists prominent among them, look to the 'Beijing model' or the 'Beijing consensus' as a desirable alternative to Western-style economic liberalism."
Wired,
July 6, 2011
"Not only is it cheaper and easier to use than existing solutions, it actually provides much better results."
The New York Times,
July 6, 2011
"Researchers at the MIT Senseable City Lab, AT&T Labs-Research and IBM Research showed off their work Wednesday, which takes anonymous aggregated AT&T mobile phone data and creates interactive maps illustrating where calls and text messages are placed and where they connect to."
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