Beyond China’s COVID unrest, 3 important economic takeaways
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As China grapples with fallout from its “zero-Covid” policy, experts are predicting a recovery at a much slower rate than has been seen in the past.
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As China grapples with fallout from its “zero-Covid” policy, experts are predicting a recovery at a much slower rate than has been seen in the past.
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As an MD with a PhD in computer science, Christine Tsien Silvers has always chosen the unexpected path, but that’s what makes her work fun.
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The “Me, Myself, and AI” podcast examines the creative ways companies use artificial intelligence, like making faster methods for vaccine experiments.
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New MIT research details the extent to which artificial intelligence will affect jobs, tasks, and costs in the transportation industry.
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In mergers and acquisitions, it takes more than low interest rates and a healthy stock market to get a deal done. New research pinpoints three unapparent behaviors.
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Before it’s in the boardroom, it’s on the syllabus at MIT Sloan — from tough tech ventures to the science of well-being.
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MIT Sloan’s Hal Gregersen explains question bursts, question audits, and why it’s important for leaders to not just ask questions but listen to the answers.
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Leaders from Google, ING, and Capital One advise avoiding the “gold rush mentality” around artificial intelligence and following these six steps instead.
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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.
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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.