In a recent MIT Leaders for Global Operations webinar titled “Can Financial Engineering Cure Cancer?”, MIT Sloan Professor Andrew Lo described how the same tools that were used to catastrophically inflate U.S. mortgage debt markets could be used to fuel a “cancer ...
Professor John Essigmann describes how oxidation reactions in our bodies are both essential for life and responsible for cell damage that can potentially lead to cancer.
This with/in/sight program on Nov. 7, 2012, featured three experts exploring the future of cancer diagnostics and treatments that are personalized to the unique attributes of each patient and their cancer: Nikhil Munshi, multiple myeloma physician at Dana-Farber Cancer ...
Jellyfish-inspired device that rapidly and efficiently captures cancer cells from blood samples could enable better patient monitoring.
MIT 7.013 Introductory Biology, Spring 2006View the complete materials: http://ocw.mit.edu/high-school/biology/Instructor: Hazel SiveLicense: Creative Commons BY-NC-SAMore information at http://ocw.mit.edu/termsMore courses at http://ocw.mit.edu
MIT 7.013 Introductory Biology, Spring 2006View the complete materials: http://ocw.mit.edu/high-school/biology/Instructor: Tyler JacksLicense: Creative Commons BY-NC-SAMore information at http://ocw.mit.edu/termsMore courses at http://ocw.mit.edu
MIT 7.013 Introductory Biology, Spring 2006View the complete materials: http://ocw.mit.edu/high-school/biology/Instructor: Hazel SiveLicense: Creative Commons BY-NC-SAMore information at http://ocw.mit.edu/termsMore courses at http://ocw.mit.edu
MIT 7.013 Introductory Biology, Spring 2006View the complete materials: http://ocw.mit.edu/high-school/biology/Instructor: Tyler JacksLicense: Creative Commons BY-NC-SAMore information at http://ocw.mit.edu/termsMore courses at http://ocw.mit.edu
Prized Science highlights the work of Robert Langer, whose influential research on tissue engineering and controlled drug release earned him the Priestley Medal.
This video profiles the Jacks Laboratory's work to understand the genetic pathways that enable the deadly spread of cancer. It is currently featured in the Koch Institute Public Galleries at MIT. See more educational exhibits from the Galleries at http://ki-galleries.mit.edu/.
Read more about the Bridge Project: http://ki.mit.edu/approach/partnerships/bridge
Richard Young, Whitehead Institute, MIT, delivers remarks at the Koch Institute's 11th Annual Oncology Research Symposium
Laurie Boyer, MIT, delivers remarks at the Koch Institute's 11th Annual Oncology Research Symposium
Tyler Jacks and Jacqueline Lees of the Koch Institute deliver remarks at the Koch Institute's 11th Annual Oncology Research Symposium
Jacqueline Lees, Kock Institute at MIT, delivers remarks at the Koch Institute's 11th Annual Oncology Research Symposium
Stephen Baylin, John Hopkins University, delivers remarks at the Koch Institute's 11th Annual Oncology Research Symposium
Tyler Jacks delivers closing remarks at the Koch Institute's 11th Annual Oncology Research Symposium
Scott Armstrong, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, delivers remarks at the Koch Institute's 11th Annual Oncology Research Symposium
John Dick, Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, delivers remarks at the Koch Institute's 11th Annual Oncology Research Symposium
The Koch Institute: Summer Symposium 2012Epigenetics, Plasticity, and CancerThe 2012 Symposium, on “Epigenetics, Plasticity, and Cancer” is the 11th Annual Oncology Research Symposium and was held on Thursday, June 14, 2012. Victoria RichonVice President of ...