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asl
Converting the patterns of nature and the human body into beneficial signals and energy
WHx Program: Unlocking Women's Health through Transformative Technologies
Life with AI | Designing the future of smart systems to improve the human experience
Future Worlds | Design and action for the future we want to live in
Cultivating Creativity | Catalyzing a global movement enabling everyone to unlock and unleash their individual and collective creativity
Connected Mind + Body | Revolutionizing the future of mental and physical wellbeing
Extending expression, learning, and health through innovations in musical composition, performance, and participation
What if clinicians could place tiny electronic chips inside the brain without the need for any surgery but with a simple injection in the a…
For more details and recent updates visit: https://web.mit.edu/deblina-sarkar/Electronics are ubiquitous in today’s world, with …
Nano-Implants for Wireless Brain Interfacing
Designing, prototyping, and building the artifacts of our sci-fi space future
Enhancing human physical capability
MIT Media Lab's Deblina Sarkar develops nano implants to treat brain diseases, advancing women's health through the WHx program.
Inventing disruptive technologies for nanoelectronic devices and creating new paradigms for life-machine symbiosis
Engineering at the limits of complexity with molecular-scale parts
Under the mentorship of Prof. Sarkar, Shun-Ying Chen wins T.S Lin Fellowship Award
Since its 2015 debut by an MIT team, expansion microscopy has advanced research on kidneys, seeds, Alzheimer’s, viruses, and more.
The technology, which achieves single-cell resolution, could help in continuous, noninvasive patient assessment to guide medical treatments.
Prof. Craig Carter’s precision design for a student-led project now on the moon encodes messages from around the world on a silicon wafer
The devices could help scientists probe subcellular regions of the brain and possibly treat disease.
For more details and recent updates visit: https://web.mit.edu/deblina-sarkar/Sensors, especially biosensors, are indispensable …
For more details and recent updates visit: https://web.mit.edu/deblina-sarkar/For understanding the brain structure, it is neces…
As part of a biosensing device without wires, the antennas could help researchers decode intricate electrical signals sent by cells.
For details and recent updates visit: https://web.mit.edu/deblina-sarkar/Nanoelectronics has the potential to enable radical too…
These devices could help scientists probe subcellular regions of the brain, and might even help restore some brain function.
2D Spintronic and Neuromorphic Devices for Sustainable Artificial Intelligence
"Autonomous operations are critical for the success, safety, and crew survival of NASA deep space missions beyond low Earth orbit, includin…
She is being recognized by the NIH for unusually innovative work in the development of biomedical implants that defy the need for surgery.
MIT scientists address issues to bringing 2D magnetic materials into practical use, setting the stage for more energy-efficient computers
AbstractDevices that facilitate nonverbal communication typically require high computational loads or have rigid and bulky form factors&nbs…
The researchers precisely controlled an ultrathin magnet at room temperature, which could enable faster processors and computer memories.
The rapid advancement of electronic devices and fabrication technologies has further promoted the field of wearables and smart textiles. Ho…
A modular, membrane protein design based biomimetic sensing system named RESENSA (Receptor S-layer Electrical Nano Sens…
The device detects the same molecules that cell receptors do, and may enable routine early screening for cancers and other diseases.
Supported by the Space Exploration Initiative, the student-run HUMANS project aims to increase global representation in space.
Professor Deblina Sarkar discusses a miniature antenna that can transmit data from inside cells without using damaging microwaves.
Jorg Scholvin talks to MIT News about his range of experiences at MIT, including current work as an assistant director at MIT.nano.
MIT researchers describe an intracellular antenna that's compatible with 3D biological systems + can operate wirelessly inside a living cell
Separating densely packed molecules before imaging allows them to become visible for the first time.
The finding opens up avenues to the development of integrated circuits that have extremely low power consumption.
Revealing insights into the human condition and repairing brain disorders via novel tools for mapping and fixing brain computations
We have pioneered the development of fully genetically encoded reagents that, when targeted to specific cells, enable their physiology to b…
Complex biological systems such as brain circuits are extended 3-D structures made out of nanoscale building blocks such as proteins, RNAs,…
Entrepreneurial science award recognizes scientists whose work opens up “new dimensions of economic progress."
New research group aims to bridge the gap between nanotechnology and synthetic biology.