Browsing Tag
MIT’s
3 posts
No More Guessing: MIT’s Ultrasound Patch Reveals How Full Your Bladder Is
MIT researchers have created a wearable ultrasound patch that can non-invasively image internal organs, initially focusing on bladder health. This device, which does not require an ultrasound operator or gel, has the potential to revolutionize the monitoring of various organ functions and disease detection.The wearable device, designed to monitor bladder and kidney health, could be
December 16, 2023
MIT’s new technique could accurately simulate complex systems
Simulation is widely used in system design for evaluating different design options since testing ideas in the real world can be both costly and risky. However, it’s impossible to capture every detail of a complex system in a simulation. Therefore, trace-driven simulation is widely used technique that typically collects a small amount of real data
May 4, 2023
MIT’s New Tool for Tackling Hard Computational Problems
Some difficult computation problems, depicted by finding the highest peak in a “landscape” of countless mountain peaks separated by valleys, can take advantage of the Overlap Gap Property: At a high enough “altitude,” any two points will be either close or far apart — but nothing in-between. David Gamarnik has developed a new tool, the…
January 13, 2022