Recent books from the MIT community – MIT Technology Review

Should You Believe Wikipedia? Online Communities and the Construction of Knowledge 
By Amy Bruckman, SM ’87, PhD ’91 
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2022, $19.99
Theoretical Investigations: Philosophical Foundations of Group Cognition
By Gerry Stahl ’76
SPRINGER, 2021, $199.99
Great Discoveries in Psychiatry
By Ronald Chase, PhD ’69
LOGOS VERLAG BERLIN, 2021, $51
Business Innovation: A Case Study Approach
By Vijay Pandiarajan, MBA ’15
ROUTLEDGE, 2022, $66.95
The Immersive Enclosure: Virtual Reality in Japan
By Paul Roquet, associate professor of media studies and Japan studies in the Comparative Media Studies/Writing program 
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2022, $35
Reimagining Sustainable Cities: Strategies for Designing Greener, Healthier, More Equitable Communities
By Stephen Wheeler and Christina D. Rosan, MCP ’02, PhD ’07
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS, 2021, $26.95
Until We Have Won Our Liberty: South Africa after Apartheid
By Evan Lieberman, professor of political science and contemporary Africa, director of MIT’s Global Diversity Lab, and director of MISTI
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2022, $29.95
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This story was part of our September/October 2022 issue.
Greg Rutkowski is a more popular prompt than Picasso.
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There’s a robust molecular language being spoken between your muscles and your brain.
The new version of AlphaZero discovered a faster way to do matrix multiplication, a core problem in computing that affects thousands of everyday computer tasks.
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