Gender disparities limit chances for women PhD students
MIT Sloan research finds that female STEM doctoral students are less likely to become new inventors compared to their male counterparts during the years of their training.
MIT Sloan research finds that female STEM doctoral students are less likely to become new inventors compared to their male counterparts during the years of their training.
New research explores how individuals’ levels of engagement variability — how consistently or inconsistently they engage in their jobs — impacts performance.
MIT Sloan research finds that on average 82% of data monetization returns come from improving work operations and customer experience versus 18% from selling information.
“When Combinations of Humans and AI Are Useful” is the first large-scale meta-analysis conducted to better understand when human-AI combinations are useful in task completion, and when they are not.
Scenes from Sloan Women in Management’s Breaking the Mold conference
A new research briefing explains how enterprises can cumulatively build capabilities and learnings from AI as they move toward a future-ready state of AI use.
Switching to a pay-as-bid auction, where each buyer pays the price they bid, could boost revenue and provide stronger incentives for companies to invest in greener technologies.
In a research paper MIT professors Andrew W. Lo and Dennis G. Whyte propose five initiatives for accelerating progress in fusion based on lessons learned from the last 50 years of biotechnology.
A paper in Nature suggests that the higher quantity of social media policy enforcement for conservative users could be explained by the higher quantity of misinformation shared by those users.
New MIT Sloan research on patterns in interest rate cycles shows that the transition from hiking to cutting rates does not necessarily imply that interest rates will fall back to low levels.