Year: 2012

  • Campus & Community

    REAI grants open for applications

    The Real Estate Academic Initiative at Harvard is offering its second round of grants of the academic year to support real estate and urban development research by Harvard faculty and students.

    1–2 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Magnetism on the moon

    A team of researchers from Harvard, MIT, and the Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris have proposed a surprisingly simple explanation for magnetic anomalies that have baffled scientists since the mid-1960s, suggesting they are remnants of a massive asteroid. As described in a paper published in Science, the researchers believe an asteroid slammed into…

    3–4 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Housing Day at Harvard

    We take a fresh look at Housing Day, one of the many hallowed traditions at Harvard University.

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Harvard Innovators – Innovation at Harvard

    Throughout the Harvard community, students, faculty, staff, and alumni/ae are working every day across disciplines and around the globe to generate innovative ideas and solutions. Here are just a few examples.

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Incubator of Innovation – Innovation at Harvard

    Medicine, business, politics….You never know where the spark of innovation may originate at Harvard.

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Nature by Design – Innovation at Harvard

    What can termites teach us about building complex computer systems?

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Fountain of Youth – Innovation at Harvard

    Our bodies repair and regenerate with the help of compound structures at the end of chromosomes called telomeres. But as these telomeres weaken, we age. Harvard swimmer Meaghan Leddy COL ’12 explains how Harvard scientists are exploring ways to reverse the symptoms of aging by increasing the levels of a certain enzyme to keep our…

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Getting with the Program – Innovation at Harvard

    Students from all disciplines flock to Computer Science 1, or “CS50,” one of the most popular offerings at Harvard.

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Bench to Bedside – Innovation at Harvard

    Harvard researchers and clinicians collaborate across disciplines and around the globe to craft solutions to the world’s toughest health challenges.

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    On the Cutting Edge of History – Innovation at Harvard

    Jeremy Geidt, lecturer on dramatic arts and senior actor at the American Repertory Theater (A.R.T.), recounts a few memorable moments in Harvard’s history.

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Growing Upwards – Innovation at Harvard

    The roots of innovation at Harvard can often be found in its students.

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    A peek at Harvard’s future

    Maya Jasanoff and her faculty colleagues gathered at the Tsai Auditorium on Feb. 16 and March 7 to consider how the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) may look in a generation. The discussions were part of the Conversations @ FAS series, which this year asks some of Harvard’s leading scholars to imagine the faculty…

    5–8 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Innovation Motivation – Innovation at Harvard

    In lecture halls, laboratories, and spaces across Harvard, dedicated teachers including Kevin Kit Parker, Gordon McKay Professor of Bioengineering and Applied Physics in the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, are creating fertile environments for innovation, championing bold ideas and encouraging students to think in new ways.

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    A New Way to Look at the Past – Innovation at Harvard

    In a powerful new approach to scholarship, researchers at Harvard are creating a digital “fossil record” of human culture by tracking the frequency with which words appear in digitized books. Culturomics, a…

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Jasanoff’s ‘Liberty’ recognized

    On Thursday, the National Book Critics Circle recognized Harvard Professor Maya Jasanoff with its award for general nonfiction for “Liberty’s Exiles: American Loyalists in the Revolutionary War” (Knopf).

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Giza in Another Dimension – Innovation at Harvard

    What if you could enter a decorated tomb chapel in a Giza pyramid, descend down an ancient burial shaft, or see 5,000-year-old inscriptions come to life—without ever having to travel?

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Power Play – Innovation at Harvard

    Bringing electricity to remote areas in developing countries is a challenge Harvard graduates Jessica Matthews AB ’10 and Julia Silverman AB ’10 are tackling head on.

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    To Preserve and Protect – Innovation at Harvard

    Working at the intersection of art and science, Harvard conservators are giving new life to the rare texts, photographs, and materials in the special collections at the Harvard Library

    1–2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Theater Reimagined – Innovation at Harvard

    Under the leadership of Artistic Director Diane Paulus, the American Repertory Theater (A.R.T.) is seeking new ways to redefine and reimagine theater for the Harvard community and beyond.

    1–2 minutes
  • Arts & Culture

    On the nature of modern thought

    The story of 15th-century book hunter Poggio Bracciolini and his rediscovery of Lucretius’ “On the Nature of Things” was captured by Cogan University Professor Stephen Greenblatt in his National Book Award-winning account, “The Swerve: How the World Became Modern.”

    13–20 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    A new view of DNA

    A new imaging technique, developed by Erez Lieberman-Aiden, a Junior Fellow of the Society of Fellows, is giving scientists their first three-dimensional view of the human genome, one that is already shedding new light on a number of what Liberman-Aiden calls the “central mysteries of biology.”

    2–4 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Clean energy pioneer brings lab to Harvard

    Daniel G. Nocera, a chemist whose work is focused on developing inexpensive new energy sources, has been appointed the Patterson Rockwood Professor of Energy in Harvard’s Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Michael D. Smith, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, announced March 8.

    2–3 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Building invisibility cloaks starts small

    Working at a scale applicable to infrared light, a Harvard team has used extremely short and powerful laser pulses to create 3-D patterns of tiny silver dots within a material. Those suspended metal dots are essential for building futuristic devices like invisibility cloaks.

    3–4 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Order out of chaos

    Freshmen, who spend their first year on campus in dormitories in Harvard Yard, were each sorted into one of Harvard’s 12 upperclass Houses today.

    3–5 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Wood to receive Alan T. Waterman Award

    Harvard engineer Robert J. Wood has been named one of two recipients of the Alan T. Waterman Award from the National Science Foundation (NSF).

    2–3 minutes
  • Health

    Bleary America needs some shut-eye

    Cranky, sleep-deprived America got some advice from experts at a Harvard School of Public Health Forum: Get some rest, and reap the health and productivity benefits shown in numerous scientific studies.

    5–7 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Sorting reality from ‘truthiness’

    A Harvard and MIT symposium seeks to understand and address propaganda and misinformation in the new media ecosystem.

    4–6 minutes
  • Arts & Culture

    Personal stories of transformation

    A new multimedia collaboration inspired by the A.R.T. production “Wild Swans” aims to capture and spread personal stories from members of the Greater Boston community with ties to China.

    3–4 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    If he builds it, the artists come

    Ed Lloyd inherited a famous gallery designed by the architect Le Corbusier. As the Carpenter Center’s exhibitions manager, he regularly transforms that space to bring current works of art to life.

    4–5 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Two recognized with Merck Fellowship

    Theodore Betley, Thomas D. Cabot Associate Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, and Victoria D’Souza, associate professor of molecular and cellular biology, were recently named as the recipients of the 2011 George W. Merck Fellowship.

    1–2 minutes