Exploring generations of influence between South Asia and MIT
Oral history project allows MIT students to dig deep into the longstanding connection between the Institute and South Asia.
Oral history project allows MIT students to dig deep into the longstanding connection between the Institute and South Asia.
The Institute ranks second in four subject areas.
Neuroscientists find that interpreting code activates a general-purpose brain network, but not language-processing centers.
System developed at MIT CSAIL aims to help linguists decipher languages that have been lost to history.
Linguistics graduate student Annauk Olin is helping her Alaska Native community preserve their language and navigate the severe impact of climate change.
Working remotely this summer, students worked to better understand human intelligence and to advance machine learning applications.
Ranked at the top for the ninth straight year, the Institute also places first in 12 subject areas.
Longtime MIT professor and department head also participated in many efforts in support of peace and social justice.
Classicist Stephanie Frampton traverses disciplines to study how the content and form of writing interacted in the ancient world.
Knowledge in both a technical and humanistic field prepares her to make new tools in computational linguistics.
Institute ranks second in five subject areas.
Even when people believed Hillary Clinton would win the 2016 election, they did not use “she” to refer to the next president.
MIT students are inventing constructed languages — or “conlangs” — in a class that uses linguistics to supply the building blocks.
Baggeroer, Flynn, Harris, Klopfer, Lauffenburger, and Leonard are recognized for their efforts to advance science.