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Edward Boyden wins 2016 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences

Edward Boyden wins 2016 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences

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(Left to right) Edward Boyden, Larry Guth, and Liang Fu | Photos: Bryce Vickmark (Boyden and Guth)

[Source: MIT News, November 9, 2015]

MIT researchers took home several awards last night at the 2016 Breakthrough Prize ceremony at NASA’s Ames Research Center in Mountain View, California.

Edward Boyden, an associate professor of media arts and sciences, biological engineering, and brain and cognitive sciences, was one of five scientists honored with the Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences, given for “transformative advances toward understanding living systems and extending human life.” He will receive $3 million for the award.

MIT physicists also contributed to a project that won the Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics. That prize went to five experiments investigating the oscillation of subatomic particles known as neutrinos. More than 1,300 contributing physicists will share in the recognition for their work, according to the award announcement. Those physicists include MIT associate professor of physics Joseph Formaggio and his team, as well as MIT assistant professor of physics Lindley Winslow.

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