Study highlights long road toward gender parity in the geosciences
Researchers find improvement in relative retention of women but predict decades of sustained effort are required to achieve gender parity.
Researchers find improvement in relative retention of women but predict decades of sustained effort are required to achieve gender parity.
Undergraduates selected for the competitive program enjoy a seminar series and conversations over dinners with distinguished faculty.
Globally, people follow a “visitation law” — an inverse relationship between distance and frequency of visits.
In the U.S. and globally, cultures with a high level of collectivism tend to encourage masking during the pandemic.
Study brings new data to a longstanding question, with findings policymakers can apply.
Different social and racial groups have varying views of the problem’s urgency.
Andres Sevtsuk’s new work estimates foot traffic in cities — so planners and developers can study the flow of people, not just vehicles.
In a Q&A, Charles Senteio discusses Covid-19 vaccine hesitancy among Black Americans and the “tsunami of inequity” accelerated by the pandemic.
Social media users share charts and graphs — often with the same underlying data — to advocate opposing approaches to the pandemic.
Catherine Clark uses visual imagery to delve into French history, culture, and society.
MIT scholars discuss what is needed for the country to support its longstanding form of government.
The author of “The Narrow Corridor,” about the battle to sustain democracy, weighs in on the country’s political condition.
Study: Healthier women are more likely to follow age-based guidelines, leaving room for better-targeted testing.
Davis, in conversation with Senior Associate Dean Blanche Staton, fields questions from the MIT community about the current moment of racial reckoning.
A special 25th anniversary award honors the MIT economist for work on employment, trade, and technological change.