Search Results Search (-) All (637) News (636) People (1) Filling a void in stem cell therapy September 14, 2015 A new porous hydrogel could boost the success of stem-cell-based tissue regeneration Small but fast: a miniaturized origami-inspired robot combines micrometer precision with high speed January 17, 2018 The millimeter-scale robot opens new avenues for microsurgery, microassembly and micromanipulation Helping transplanted stem cells stick around and do their jobs July 16, 2019 New microgel encapsulation method paves the way for more efficient cell therapies Solar energy could turn the Belt and Road Initiative green July 12, 2019 Researchersquantify the region's renewable energy potential Getting under the skin of psoriasis July 22, 2020 Ionic-liquid-based technology delivers RNA therapeutic to locally block psoriasis-associated genes in mice A rubber computer eliminates the last hard components from soft robots March 26, 2019 Soft digital logic emulates the thought process of an electronic computer and the feel of a human hand No battery, no wire, no problem July 19, 2017 Wireless magnetic fields and actuator “muscles” allow folding robots to move without batteries Evidence shows increased risk of ozone loss over the United States in summer June 5, 2017 Researchers link the need forforecasts of ozone lossover theGreat Plainsto climate change A bioengineered factory for T-cells February 11, 2019 Injectable sponge-like gel enhances the quantity and quality of T-cells Alaska tundra source of early-winter carbon emissions May 8, 2017 New research finds carbon dioxide emitted from northern tundra between October and December has increased 70 percent since 1975 Soft robot helps the heart beat January 18, 2017 Sleeve attaches directly around the heart The false choice of basic vs. applied research January 3, 2017 Former SEAS dean says the traditional divide stifles discovery, and he offers an alternative model Mitigating the risk of geoengineering December 12, 2016 Aerosols could cool the planet without ozone damage No more Iron Man: submarines now have soft, robotic arms October 3, 2018 A new, modular soft robotic arm gives deep-sea researchers better dexterity for embracing delicate sea life Creating a slippery slope on the surface of medical implants November 1, 2016 Self-healing slippery coating applied on the surface of an implanted medical device protects against infectious biofilm formation Young, female, Native American, scientist September 21, 2018 Students took part in summer research program for undergrads A viable vaccine for tough tumors November 11, 2020 Biomaterial-based cancer vaccine combines chemo and immunotherapy to treat triple-negative breast cancer in mice More progress in building functional human tissues October 11, 2016 Harvard materials scientists have bioprinted a tubular 3D renal architecture that recapitulates functions of the kidney Getting to the heart of engineering a heart June 10, 2022 New tissue engineering capabilities enable researchers to program contractility in functional layers of heart tissue bioprinted with human stem cell-derived organ building blocks National Science Foundation awards $20M to launch artificial-intelligence institute August 27, 2020 Harvard, MIT, Northeastern, Tufts to explore use of AI in fundamental physics Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 27 Page 28 Current page 29 Page 30 Page 31 … Page 32 32 Page 33 33 Next page › Last page »
Filling a void in stem cell therapy September 14, 2015 A new porous hydrogel could boost the success of stem-cell-based tissue regeneration
Small but fast: a miniaturized origami-inspired robot combines micrometer precision with high speed January 17, 2018 The millimeter-scale robot opens new avenues for microsurgery, microassembly and micromanipulation
Helping transplanted stem cells stick around and do their jobs July 16, 2019 New microgel encapsulation method paves the way for more efficient cell therapies
Solar energy could turn the Belt and Road Initiative green July 12, 2019 Researchersquantify the region's renewable energy potential
Getting under the skin of psoriasis July 22, 2020 Ionic-liquid-based technology delivers RNA therapeutic to locally block psoriasis-associated genes in mice
A rubber computer eliminates the last hard components from soft robots March 26, 2019 Soft digital logic emulates the thought process of an electronic computer and the feel of a human hand
No battery, no wire, no problem July 19, 2017 Wireless magnetic fields and actuator “muscles” allow folding robots to move without batteries
Evidence shows increased risk of ozone loss over the United States in summer June 5, 2017 Researchers link the need forforecasts of ozone lossover theGreat Plainsto climate change
A bioengineered factory for T-cells February 11, 2019 Injectable sponge-like gel enhances the quantity and quality of T-cells
Alaska tundra source of early-winter carbon emissions May 8, 2017 New research finds carbon dioxide emitted from northern tundra between October and December has increased 70 percent since 1975
The false choice of basic vs. applied research January 3, 2017 Former SEAS dean says the traditional divide stifles discovery, and he offers an alternative model
Mitigating the risk of geoengineering December 12, 2016 Aerosols could cool the planet without ozone damage
No more Iron Man: submarines now have soft, robotic arms October 3, 2018 A new, modular soft robotic arm gives deep-sea researchers better dexterity for embracing delicate sea life
Creating a slippery slope on the surface of medical implants November 1, 2016 Self-healing slippery coating applied on the surface of an implanted medical device protects against infectious biofilm formation
Young, female, Native American, scientist September 21, 2018 Students took part in summer research program for undergrads
A viable vaccine for tough tumors November 11, 2020 Biomaterial-based cancer vaccine combines chemo and immunotherapy to treat triple-negative breast cancer in mice
More progress in building functional human tissues October 11, 2016 Harvard materials scientists have bioprinted a tubular 3D renal architecture that recapitulates functions of the kidney
Getting to the heart of engineering a heart June 10, 2022 New tissue engineering capabilities enable researchers to program contractility in functional layers of heart tissue bioprinted with human stem cell-derived organ building blocks
National Science Foundation awards $20M to launch artificial-intelligence institute August 27, 2020 Harvard, MIT, Northeastern, Tufts to explore use of AI in fundamental physics