Skip to content ↓
Menu
What are you looking for?

Spotlight: Nov 11, 2025

Phillip Isola studies how intelligent machines “think” and perceive the world, to ensure AI is safely integrated into human society. “I see all the different kinds of intelligence as having a lot of commonalities, and I’d like to understand those commonalities,” he says.

Nov 11, 2025

Full story

Research and Education that Matter

Physicists observed key evidence of unconventional superconductivity in a special form of graphene. The findings may guide the design of superconductors that work at room temperature, “which is sort of the Holy Grail of the entire field,” Pablo Jarillo-Herrero says.

As president and CEO of the Arkansas & Missouri Railroad, Caren Kraska ’77 helps Americans appreciate the role of trains in the modern economy. Now an Arkansas community leader, she says: “You take that MIT approach with you.”

Biological engineers have found several possible targets for a new vaccine against tuberculosis — the world’s deadliest infectious disease, killing more than 1 million people annually. “There’s still a huge TB burden globally,” Bryan Bryson says.

Engineers have developed a flexible drug-delivery patch that can be placed on the heart after a heart attack to promote healing and regeneration of cardiac tissue. The patch is designed to carry several drugs that can be released at different times.

In a world without MIT, radar wouldn’t have been available to help win World War II. We might not have email, CT scans, time-release drugs, photolithography, or GPS. And we’d lose over 30,000 companies, employing millions of people. Can you imagine?

​Since its founding, MIT has been key to helping American science and innovation lead the world. Discoveries that begin here generate jobs and power the economy — and what we create today builds a better tomorrow for all of us.