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 Computational Science & Engineering Data Sciences Dean REEF Makerspace Bioengineering Climate Computer Science Cooking COVID-19 Design Diversity / Inclusion Electrical Engineering Entrepreneurship Environment Environmental Science & Engineering Ethics Events Geoengineering Graduate Student Profile Health / Medicine Industry K-12 Master of Design Engineering Materials Materials Science & Mechanical Engineering MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Robotics Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Date Showing 570 of 626 results May 8, 2017 Alaska tundra source of early-winter carbon emissions New research finds carbon dioxide emitted from northern tundra between October and December has increased 70 percent since 1975 Sep 21, 2018 Young, female, Native American, scientist Students took part in summer research program for undergrads Diversity / Inclusion, Sep 18, 2018 Multi-joint, personalized soft exosuit breaks new ground Fully wearable soft exosuit with automatic tuning helps users save energy and walk outside over difficult terrain Robotics, May 12, 2020 Soft robotic exosuit makes stroke survivors walk faster and farther Research study in stroke survivors with chronic hemiparesis shows soft exosuit technology to bring immediate improvements in walking speed and endurance tests Health / Medicine, Robotics, Jul 18, 2018 Studying aliens of the deep Folding polyhedron sampler enables easy capture and release of delicate underwater organisms Environment, Robotics, Jan 18, 2017 Soft robot helps the heart beat Sleeve attaches directly around the heart Jan 3, 2017 The false choice of basic vs. applied research Former SEAS dean says the traditional divide stifles discovery, and he offers an alternative model Dec 12, 2016 Mitigating the risk of geoengineering Aerosols could cool the planet without ozone damage Climate, Nov 1, 2016 Creating a slippery slope on the surface of medical implants Self-healing slippery coating applied on the surface of an implanted medical device protects against infectious biofilm formation Materials, Oct 11, 2016 More progress in building functional human tissues Harvard materials scientists have bioprinted a tubular 3D renal architecture that recapitulates functions of the kidney Materials, Bioengineering, Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 55 Page 56 Current page 57 Page 58 Page 59 … Page 62 62 Page 63 63 Next page › Last page »
May 8, 2017 Alaska tundra source of early-winter carbon emissions New research finds carbon dioxide emitted from northern tundra between October and December has increased 70 percent since 1975
Sep 21, 2018 Young, female, Native American, scientist Students took part in summer research program for undergrads Diversity / Inclusion,
Sep 18, 2018 Multi-joint, personalized soft exosuit breaks new ground Fully wearable soft exosuit with automatic tuning helps users save energy and walk outside over difficult terrain Robotics,
May 12, 2020 Soft robotic exosuit makes stroke survivors walk faster and farther Research study in stroke survivors with chronic hemiparesis shows soft exosuit technology to bring immediate improvements in walking speed and endurance tests Health / Medicine, Robotics,
Jul 18, 2018 Studying aliens of the deep Folding polyhedron sampler enables easy capture and release of delicate underwater organisms Environment, Robotics,
Jan 3, 2017 The false choice of basic vs. applied research Former SEAS dean says the traditional divide stifles discovery, and he offers an alternative model
Dec 12, 2016 Mitigating the risk of geoengineering Aerosols could cool the planet without ozone damage Climate,
Nov 1, 2016 Creating a slippery slope on the surface of medical implants Self-healing slippery coating applied on the surface of an implanted medical device protects against infectious biofilm formation Materials,
Oct 11, 2016 More progress in building functional human tissues Harvard materials scientists have bioprinted a tubular 3D renal architecture that recapitulates functions of the kidney Materials, Bioengineering,