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    Health Science Technologies @MIT

    Thu, March 25, 2021 Webinar
    Leading Edge Roundtable – AI, PERTURBATION, INTEGRATION, DISCOVERY

    The pharmaceutical industry has experienced an extraordinary rise in the generation and use of enormous datasets. Nevertheless, there remain great challenges on this front regarding everything from target identification to understanding the performance of marketed products. In the context of this broad impact, we have assembled a group of leading researchers and executives from the MIT-connected community who will address questions of discovery, data integration, and system perturbation analysis, including use of artificial intelligence and machine learning techniques. What is the impact of current developments on high-throughput profiling, computational biology, and validation of gene targets? How do these developments impact the use of chemical libraries, drug-delivery systems, and patient-facing objectives? These are the types of questions that will be addressed in this exciting panel discussion.

  • September 3, 2021
    Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab (J-WAFS)

    Improving Smallholder Farmers’ Welfare with AI-Driven Technologies

    Principal Investigator Yanchong (Karen) Zheng

  • After Moore's Law (Repeat)

    Wed, October 21, 2020 Webinar
    Webinar: MRL-ILP Webinar Series

    Transistor footprint scaling is rapidly approaching its limits. But this is not about to slow the rapid progress of information processing technology. On the contrary, 3D integration involving new material systems and devices opens a new era with unprecedented promise.

  • August 1, 2008

    Linking Customer Loyalty to Growth

  • October 1, 2009

    How Sustainability Will Change Management

  • July 1, 2008

    Outsourcing: Design, Process, and Performance

  • SMR-Logo
    November 11, 2021

    Online Shoppers Don't Always Care About Faster Delivery

  • 2024 MIT Sustainability Conference: MIT Climate & Sustainability Consortium Project Highlights

    October 22, 2024Conference Video Duration: 34:22

    MIT Climate & Sustainability Consortium Project Highlights
    Introduction and Update
    Jeremy Gregory
    Executive Director, MIT Climate & Sustainability Consortium

    The Climate and Sustainability Implications of Generative AI
    Noman Bashir
    Computing & Climate Impact Fellow, MIT Climate & Sustainability Consortium

    The rapid expansion of generative artificial intelligence (Gen-AI) neglects consideration of negative effects alongside expected benefits. This incomplete cost calculation promotes unchecked growth and a risk of unjustified techno-optimism with potential environmental consequences, including expanding demand for computing power, larger carbon footprints, and an accelerated depletion of natural resources. The current siloed focus on efficiency improvements results instead in increased adoption without fundamentally considering the vast sustainability implications of Gen-AI. 

    In this talk, I will propose that responsible development of Gen-AI requires a focus on sustainability beyond only efficiency improvements and necessitates benefit-cost evaluation frameworks that encourage (or require) Gen-AI to develop in ways that support social and environmental sustainability goals alongside economic opportunity. However, a comprehensive value consideration is complex and requires detailed analysis, coordination, innovation, and adoption across diverse stakeholders. Engaging stakeholders, including technical and sociotechnical experts, corporate entities, policymakers, and civil society, in a benefit-cost analysis would foster development in the most urgent and impactful directions while reducing unsustainable practices. More details are in our white paper, which is accessible at MIT Gen-AI Sustainability White Paper.

    A Cautionary Tale about Deep Learning-based Climate Emulators
    Björn Lütjens
    Postdoctoral Associate, MIT Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences

    Climate models are computationally very expensive for exploring the impacts of climate policies. For example, simulating the impacts of a single policy emission scenario can take multiple weeks and cost hundreds of thousands of USD in computing. Compellingly, deep learning models can now forecast the weather in seconds rather than hours in comparison to conventional weather models and are being proposed to achieve similar reductions by approximating climate models. Climate approximations or emulators, however, have already been developed since the 1990s and I will present how we implemented a linear regression-based emulator that outperforms a novel 100M-parameter transformer-based deep learning emulator on the most common climate emulation benchmark. I will use our results to discuss more nuanced insights highlighting how chaotic dynamics influence emulator performance and use cases where deep-learning emulators can improve existing linear emulators. 

    Collaborative Development of an Interactive Decision Support Tool for Trucking Fleet Decarbonization
    Danika MacDonell
    Impact Fellow, MIT Climate & Sustainability Consortium

    This presentation shares the journey of creating an interactive geospatial decision support tool in close collaboration with industry and academic partners of the MIT Climate & Sustainability Consortium. The tool leverages comprehensive public data on freight flows, costs, emissions, infrastructure, and regulatory incentives. Integrating key insights and methodologies from our partners, it aims to assist trucking industry stakeholders in identifying and assessing strategies to transition fleets to low-carbon energy carriers.

  • Yogesh
    Surendranath

    Professor of Chemistry
    Primary DLC
    Department of Chemistry

    Contact

    MIT Room
    18-292
    Phone
    (617) 253-2664
    yogi@mit.edu

    Assistant

    Assistant Name
    Joanne Baldini
    Assistant phone number
    (617) 253-1848
    jbaldini@mit.edu
  • April 1, 2009

    Why the Economy Needs Technological Innovation

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