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June 14, 2025
Greetings! Here’s a roundup of the latest from the MIT community.
 
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Time-Delay Pills
A star-shaped drug delivery device
    
With a new type of pill developed by MIT researchers, some medications could be taken once a week instead of daily. In a phase 3 clinical trial, the once-a-week capsule delivered the drug risperidone in patients with schizophrenia, controlling their symptoms just as well as daily doses.
Top Headlines
Window-sized device taps the air for safe drinking water
MIT engineers developed an atmospheric water harvester that produces fresh water anywhere — even Death Valley, California.
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New system enables robots to solve manipulation problems in seconds
Researchers developed an algorithm that lets a robot “think ahead” and consider thousands of potential motion plans simultaneously.
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Listening to frontline workers
An MIT Sloan study led by Erin Kelly explores power of employee input to improve workplace conditions.
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Animation technique simulates the motion of squishy objects
The approach could help animators to create realistic 3D characters or engineers to design elastic products.
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Have a damaged painting? Restore it in just hours with an AI-generated “mask”
A new method can physically restore original paintings using digitally constructed films, which can be removed if desired.
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The scholar-warrior: How Erik Lin-Greenberg bridges academia and Air Force intelligence
The MIT political scientist and U.S. Air Force Reserve squadron commander brings unique perspective to both the classroom and the military.
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Engineering better sleep during menopause
Loewen Cavill ’20, co-founder of Amira Health, helped to develop a wearable bracelet and cooling mattress pad to address debilitating hot flashes.
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#ThisisMIT
Collage of nine members of MIT’s class of 1975 posing in same poses as rowing championship photo from 1975. Text via @‌MITAA: At last Sunday's Reunion Row, alumni from the MIT Class of 1975 recreated the photo taken 50 years ago when they won the Intercollegiate Rowing Association (IRA) National Championship. https://bit.ly/3RdpIB5
In the Media
Ozempic, the internet, GPS: Here are 5 things New England researchers helped develop with federal funding // The Boston Globe
Boston Globe reporter Emily Spatz spotlights how a number of key technologies — including the internet and the first widely used electronic navigation system — were created by MIT researchers with the support of federal funding.
New mobile robot helps seniors walk safely and prevent falls // Fox News
MIT researchers developed a mobile robot, dubbed E-BAR, that’s designed to help physically support the elderly and prevent falls at home.
Prolific MIT materials professor develops a clean power source for airplanes made from … table salt? // The Boston Globe
Professor Yet-Ming Chiang and colleagues developed a sodium-air fuel cell that “packs three to four times more energy per pound than common lithium-ion batteries,” which could eventually be used as a runway for “a groundbreaking clean power source for airplanes.”
Stanley Fischer, groundbreaking economist and Fed vice chair, dies at 81 // The Wall Street Journal
Professor Emeritus Stanley Fischer, “one of the most influential economists of recent decades,” has died at age 81.
Scene at MIT
Colorful geometric sculpture in front of a brick building
“Madrigal” is a vibrant campus sculpture by Sanford Biggers that was recently acquired as the Percent-for-Art commission for MIT’s new Edward and Joyce Linde Music Building (Building W18). Biggers, who is attracted to quilts for their vernacular artistry and as everyday domestic objects, has studied pre-1900 versions and the long-debated historical narrative that certain patterns functioned as semaphores, conveying coded messages along the Underground Railroad to aid enslaved people in their flight to emancipated territories. With “Madrigal,” dazzling visual harmonies (and discordances) are created as the work’s complex geometry enfolds six distinct quilt patterns into seemingly endless configurations.
Digit
477,053
Area, in square feet, of recreation facilities at MIT, spanning 26 acres throughout the MIT campus
Watch This
Eran Egozy and piano and clarinet in the background
In this video, Eran Egozy ’95, MEng ’95 discusses his time as an engineering major and musician at MIT, during which he was able to take a signal processing course that led him to discover the powerful connection between engineering and music. Egozy also shares how he co-founded the company that developed the popular video game “Guitar Hero,” as well as his return to the Institute as a professor of the practice in music technology and leader of MIT’s Music Technology and Computation graduate program, which launches this fall.
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