All articles
-
Health
‘Harvard Thinking’: Breaking the regret cycle
In podcast, experts offer a better way to cope with mistakes and missed opportunities

-
Health
Is napping a sign of a deeper health problem?
New study finds link between certain sleep patterns and higher mortality in older adults

-
Health
Hantavirus likely to be fully contained but may take time, Hanage says
Disease much deadlier than COVID but a lot harder to spread

-
Campus & Community
Harvard releases information on 1,613 enslaved individuals
Public database advances research on University’s ties to slavery, bolsters effort to help descendants recover family histories

-
Science & Tech
‘Deskilling’ is bad. This is worse.
Authors of book about classroom AI see growing void where foundational knowledge used to be

-
Campus & Community
Helping to give birth to nation — and Harvard Med
School founder John Warren numbered among alumni who were part of revolutionary generation

-
Health
In the tiny, vulnerable patients, she saw herself
Caring for premature babies sparked Alison Farrar’s passion for psychiatry. Manning a crisis hotline during COVID sealed it.

-
Health
Glint of light in therapy for deadly ALS after decades of struggle
New drug shows researchers ‘this illness can be stopped’

-
Campus & Community
Moved to act
Eco-friendly, AI, medical, and other inventions earn funds for President’s Innovation Challenge winners

-
Campus & Community
Probing the war of public opinion
Seeing Americans rally for her native Ukraine inspired Anastasiia Pereverten’s thesis

-
Health
Simpler is better when it comes to saving lives
Teen, young adult suicides fall from long upward trend after national crisis hotline shifts to three digits

-
Campus & Community
How immigrant doctors propped up U.S. healthcare, the tale of America’s last prison ship, and other stories
Faculty authors discuss books at Weatherhead Center’s annual International Book Blitz

-

-

-

-
Campus & Community
Catalyst Professorship fosters collaboration with the private sector
New part-time role allows leading faculty to pursue industry employment alongside academic work

-
Nation & World
Warning: This debate ‘could be really combustible’
Conservative and progressive law scholars get together to trade views on SCOTUS legitimacy — and prove a chatbot wrong

-
Health
Should you ask ChatGPT for medical advice?
Physician and AI researcher Adam Rodman says AI can be helpful but has some tips on how, when to use it safely

-
Arts & Culture
Uncovering histories of us
Schlesinger Library’s scrapbook collection offers scholars insights into hidden stories, texture of everyday life in bygone eras

-
Science & Tech
Worried about how online firms use data they get from you?
Berkman Klein researchers unveil new tool to verify identity, let users limit information they share, where it is stored

-
Science & Tech
Building useful quantum computers ‘in our direct line of sight’
Researchers say creation of startups suggests game-changing tech may be developing at faster pace than expected

-
Science & Tech
‘If you’re boring, it’s good to know that you’re being boring.’
The perils of seeking empathy from a chatbot

-
Campus & Community
At the heart of the Science and Engineering Complex, a library named for a trailblazing alumna
Gift from the Troper Wojcicki Foundation honors the late technology executive Susan Wojcicki

-
Nation & World
Breyer makes case for civic education
Retired SCOTUS justice says path to less polarization runs through the classroom

-
Campus & Community
Harvard deepens commitment to HBCUs with $1.05 million grant
The award, through the Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery Initiative, will strengthen research capacity at 15 schools

-
Science & Tech
Why we love dogs — and they love us back
In podcast, experts break down evolution and biology of this special relationship

-
Nation & World
Call for ‘historical truth’ in our narrative of Nazi defeat
Jochen Hellbeck wants the West to acknowledge the Soviet role in stopping Hitler

-
Health
Call it his personal Everest
A new study shows that climbing Mount Everest has gotten safer, but still claims climbers’ lives regularly.

-
Campus & Community
Presidential dreams can wait. For now, she can’t stop painting.
When Daniela Solis took an art class junior year, ‘it felt like time stopped.’

