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Regina Barzilay

School of Engineering Distinguished Professor for AI and Health 
AI Faculty Lead, Jameel Clinic
MacArthur Fellow

MIT Computer Science & Artificial Intelligence Lab
32 Vassar Street, 32-G468
Cambridge, MA 02139
(617) 258-5706 | regina@csail.mit.edu
Lab Website: rbg.mit.edu
News

News

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New diagnostic tool in battle against breast cancer

How artificial intelligence may help detect early signs of breast cancer years before symptoms.                                       

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Is artificial intelligence about to transform the mammogram?

An MIT researcher who survived breast cancer has devised a technique that seems to predict many breast cancer cases.

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A path forward for trusted AI in breast cancer risk prediction

As the role of artificial intelligence grows in medicine, one of the leading concerns is that algorithmic tools will perpetuate disparities in care.

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These Doctors Are Using AI to Screen for Breast Cancer

During the pandemic, thousands of women have skipped scans and check-ups. So physicians tapped an algorithm to predict those at the highest risk.

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A leading AI researcher calls for standards to ensure equity and fairness

A top researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on Thursday said that artificial intelligence systems developed for medicine must be more transparent and judged against a set...

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MIT Professor Who Advanced Cancer Treatment Wins $1 Million AI Prize

Regina Barzilay, a breast cancer survivor, was recognized for her work in breast-cancer detection and drug discovery.

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Machine learning has been used to automatically translate long-lost languages

Some languages that have never been deciphered could be the next ones to get the machine translation treatment.

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Can these researchers catch cancer much earlier than ever before?

From revolutionizing the mammogram to spotting a single tumor cell in the blood...

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Looking to Technology to Avoid Doctors’ Offices and Emergency Rooms

Americans are eagerly turning to the latest tech devices in hopes of preventing and detecting medical problems early...

Research Interests

Oncology

Learning to Cure

Data collected about millions of cancer patients — their pathology slides, imaging, and other tests — contain answers to many open questions in oncology. Jointly with the MGH collaborators, we are developing algorithms that can learn from this data to improve models of disease progression, prevent over-treatment, and narrow down to the cure. On the NLP side, we are creating databases which record pertinent cancer features extracted from raw documents. On the computer vision side, we are working on deep learning models that compute personalized assessment from mammogram data focusing on early cancer detection.

Chemistry

ML Drug Discovery

Today, drug discovery involves practitioners with years of advanced training and is carried out in a trial-and-error, labor-intensive fashion. Our goal is to change a traditional discovery pipeline. In a joint work with chemical engineers and biologists at MIT, we are working on deep learning methods for modeling biological and physicochemical properties, de-novo molecular design, and retrosynthesis.  On the ML side, this area brings many interesting questions related to learning molecular representations, interpretability and robustness. As part of the MLPDS consortium, we are continuously learning  from the deployment of our models in the pharmaceutical industry, directing the development towards our ultimate goal to change the drug discovery process.

Research Interests

Bio / Awards

Group

Teaching

Fall 2023:

 

6.8700 / 6.8701 Advanced Computational Biology: Genomes, Networks, Evolution

Spring 2024: 

6.C01 / 6.C51 Modeling with Machine Learning: from Algorithms to Applications 

Bio

Awards

Regina Barzilay is a School of Engineering Distinguished Professor of AI & Health in the Department of Computer Science and the AI Faculty Lead at MIT Jameel Clinic. She develops machine learning methods for drug discovery and clinical AI. In the past, she worked on natural language processing. Her research has been recognized with the MacArthur Fellowship, an NSF Career Award, and the AAAI Squirrel AI Award for Artificial Intelligence for the Benefit of Humanity. Regina is a member of the National Academy of Engineering, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the National Academy of Medicine.

  • National Academy of Medicine 2023

  • National Academy of Engineering 2023

  • Susan G. Komen Scholar 2022

  • AACC Wallace H. Coulter Lectureship Award 2021

  • UNESCO/Netexplo Award 2021

  • School of Engineering Distinguished Professor for AI and Health (2021) 

  • AAAI Squirrel AI Award for Artificial Intelligence for the Benefit of Humanity 2021

  • Top 100 AI Leaders in Drug Discovery & Advanced Healthcare 2019

  • Xconomy Boston Digital Trailblazer 2019

  • Susan Komen Scholar 2018

  • Ruth and Joel Spira Award for Excellence in Teaching 2018

  • AAAI Fellowship 2017

  • ACL Fellowship 2017

  • MacArthur Fellowship 2017

  • Best Paper Award, EMNLP 2016

  • Burgess & Elizabeth Jamieson Award for Excellence in Teaching 2016

  • Delta Electronics Professor 2016

  • Best Paper Honorable Mention, EMNLP 2015

  • Faculty Research Innovation Fellowship 2014

  • Best Student Paper Award, NAACL 2014

  • Best Paper Award, SLT 2010

  • Carolyn Baldwin Morrison Lecture, Cornell 2009

  • Best Paper Award, ACL 2009

  • Ross Career Development Professor 2006

  • Microsoft Faculty Fellowship 2006

  • IEEE Intelligent Systems: “AI Ten to Watch” 2006

  • Technology Review: 35 Top Innovators 2005

  • NSF Career Award 2005

  • Technology Research News: “Top Picks: Technology Research Advances of 2004”

  • Best Paper Award, HLT/NAACL 2004

Teaching / Students
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