The future will be engineered. Help us reach 600 donors today by supporting the Department of EECS as we tackle the challenges of tomorrow.
Give through the MIT School of Engineering Challenge and select EECS in the dropdown. Link in bio.
Today, Associate Professor Justin Solomon was named to the 2025 cohort of Schmidt Polymaths by @schmidtsciences His work will explore problems in acoustics, climate, and other fields that require digital simulation of physical phenomena. Congratulations, Justin!
Class of 2025 speaking! Here are some of our favorite shots from the celebrations following the undergraduate ceremony on May 29th.
All photos: Brian Malloy, copyright Randall Garnick Photography.
#graduation #MIT2025
It's our favorite time of year: celebration season. Here are some of our very favorite shots from the 2025 advanced degree ceremony and reception on May 28th.
#mit2025 #graduation
Photo credits:
Gretchen Ertl: photos 1, 2, 6, and 9
Randall Garnick: photos 3, 4, 5, 7, and 8
MIT needs your support to solve humanity’s great challenges. During today’s #MIT24 Hour Challenge, please consider donating to EECS through the @MITEngineering microchallenge. Every gift will help empower the next generation of MIT engineers to apply their considerable talents in service to the world. Giving link in bio.
The world is counting on MIT, and today MIT is counting on us. During the #MIT24 Hour Challenge, please consider giving to EECS through the @MITEngineering microchallenge. Your generosity will help empower the next generation of MIT engineers to apply their considerable talents in service to the world. Giving link in bio.
We're excited to 👀 Paul Liang and Jelena Notaros today, appearing as (respectively) a new member and an All-Star Alumna of the #forbes30under30 Science list!
Our professors wrote the book on computer vision. Literally.
Hot off the @mitpress , this 800+ page beauty took 13 years to develop. Interview with coauthors Antonio Torralba, Phillip Isola, and Bill Freeman is up now (link in profile).
What's that we hear? A new crop of graduates?
You all brought the joy: we just brought the camera. Here are a few of our favorite shots from the #MIT2024 Undergraduate Reception for EECS following @MITCommencement .
Photos by: @randallgarnick_commercial
Some of our favorite shots from the #MIT2024 Advanced Degree Reception for EECS following @MITCommencement .
Congratulations to all the grads--and thanks to all their friends, supporters, and family members who helped them get to this joyful, jubilant day.
Photos by: @randallgarnick_commercial
Distinguished EECS & RLE Seminar
Al Oppenheim: Signal Processing: How did we get to where weʼre going?
Friday May 24
1pm
45-801
All members of the MIT community are welcome!
The field of Digital Signal Processing had its origins in the early 50’s and has had, and continues to have, a major impact on how signal processing systems are designed and implemented. Much of the birth of the field of DSP was centered at MIT both on campus and at Lincoln Laboratory. In this talk, Professor Oppenheim will describe his personal involvement in those early years and some of the pioneers who influenced him and who made it happen, and make some remarks about where he think the field might be heading.
Professor Oppenheim is Ford Professor of Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).