After a weekend of numbers-crunching — at the behest of Uber Chief Executive Dara Khosrowshahi — eggheads at Massachusetts Institute of Technology are expected to announce new findings Monday about how much Uber and Lyft drivers earn.

A report last month by MIT’s Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research found that nearly three-quarters of Uber and Lyft drivers earn less than the state’s minimum wage — with the median profit being a measly $3.37 an hour.

But even more shocking were findings that 30 percent of drivers actually lose money driving for the ride-sharing apps.

The report — and its methodology — sparked the ire of Khosrowshahi.

“MIT = Mathematically Incompetent Theories (at least as it pertains to ride-sharing),” Khosrowshahi tweeted Friday.

“Inconsistent logic” in MIT’s survey questions likely led to the low earnings figure, Jonathan Hall, chief economist of Uber chimed in on Medium, the social journalism app.

The pushback was enough for the MIT group, led by Stephen Zoepf, to rethink its math.

“I’m re-running the analysis this weekend using Uber’s more optimistic assumptions and should have new results and a public response acknowledging the discrepancy by Monday,” Zoepf wrote in an e-mail to Reuters, which first reported the redo.

Zoepf did not immediately respond to requests to comment.