News News Events All News Stories All news stories Filter by Topics Academics Active Learning Labs AI / Machine Learning Allston Campus Applied Computation Applied Mathematics Applied Physics Alumni Awards Belonging Collective behavior Computational Science & Engineering Data Sciences Dean REEF Makerspace Bioengineering Climate Computer Science Cooking COVID-19 Design Electrical Engineering Entrepreneurship Environment Environmental Science & Engineering Ethics Events Geoengineering Graduate Student Profile Health / Medicine Industry K-12 Kirigami Master of Design Engineering Materials Materials Science & Mechanical Engineering Meet Our Faculty Metasurfaces MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Robotics Robobee Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Wearable Devices Wildfire Date Showing 330 of 397 results Mar 4, 2013 The unconventional David Edwards Dreaming large, bioengineer links art, science, and commerce (Boston Globe) Entrepreneurship, Bioengineering, Feb 28, 2013 Teaching machines to see David Cox reverse-engineers human vision for computers Computer Science, Bioengineering, AI / Machine Learning, Feb 22, 2013 Celebrating excellence in mentoring Sujata Bhatia and David C. Parkes receive McDonald Award for dedication to mentoring and advising Computer Science, Bioengineering, Feb 5, 2013 If you give a bioengineer a cookie... By studying hand motions, Maurice Smith is creating an instruction manual to help repair a broken-down brain Bioengineering, Jan 28, 2013 Bioinspired fibers change color when stretched Color-tunable photonic fibers mimic the fruit of the “bastard hogberry” plant Bioengineering, Nov 28, 2012 Joanna Aizenberg elected Fellow of the American Physical Society Materials scientist will be honored for her "research in biomineralization and the control of templated nucleation and growth of crystals" Materials, Bioengineering, Nov 13, 2012 Injectable sponge delivers drugs, cells, and structure Compressible bioscaffold pops back to its molded shape once inside the body Materials, Health / Medicine, Bioengineering, Sep 26, 2012 Controlling behavior, remotely Researchers use precise lasers to manipulate neurons in worms’ brains (Harvard Gazette) Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Sep 24, 2012 In birds' development, researchers find diversity by the peck New investigation of tissues and signaling pathways in finches' beaks reveals surprising flexibility in the birds' evolutionary toolkit Bioengineering, Applied Mathematics, Aug 30, 2012 Uncoiling the cucumber's enigma In the creeping plant's tendrils, researchers discover a biological mechanism for coiling and stumble upon an unusual type of spring Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Applied Mathematics, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 31 Page 32 Current page 33 Page 34 Page 35 … Page 39 39 Page 40 40 Next page › Last page »
Mar 4, 2013 The unconventional David Edwards Dreaming large, bioengineer links art, science, and commerce (Boston Globe) Entrepreneurship, Bioengineering,
Feb 28, 2013 Teaching machines to see David Cox reverse-engineers human vision for computers Computer Science, Bioengineering, AI / Machine Learning,
Feb 22, 2013 Celebrating excellence in mentoring Sujata Bhatia and David C. Parkes receive McDonald Award for dedication to mentoring and advising Computer Science, Bioengineering,
Feb 5, 2013 If you give a bioengineer a cookie... By studying hand motions, Maurice Smith is creating an instruction manual to help repair a broken-down brain Bioengineering,
Jan 28, 2013 Bioinspired fibers change color when stretched Color-tunable photonic fibers mimic the fruit of the “bastard hogberry” plant Bioengineering,
Nov 28, 2012 Joanna Aizenberg elected Fellow of the American Physical Society Materials scientist will be honored for her "research in biomineralization and the control of templated nucleation and growth of crystals" Materials, Bioengineering,
Nov 13, 2012 Injectable sponge delivers drugs, cells, and structure Compressible bioscaffold pops back to its molded shape once inside the body Materials, Health / Medicine, Bioengineering,
Sep 26, 2012 Controlling behavior, remotely Researchers use precise lasers to manipulate neurons in worms’ brains (Harvard Gazette) Bioengineering, Applied Physics,
Sep 24, 2012 In birds' development, researchers find diversity by the peck New investigation of tissues and signaling pathways in finches' beaks reveals surprising flexibility in the birds' evolutionary toolkit Bioengineering, Applied Mathematics,
Aug 30, 2012 Uncoiling the cucumber's enigma In the creeping plant's tendrils, researchers discover a biological mechanism for coiling and stumble upon an unusual type of spring Bioengineering, Applied Physics, Applied Mathematics,