Here you find the recent daily news of the Harvard University
Harvard GazetteOfficial news from Harvard University covering innovation in teaching, learning, and researchLooks like a book. Reads, to some, like a threat.Houghton exhibit explores forbidden history
This work of the Renaissance humanist Erasmus has had passages expurgated in heavy black ink. Over time, the corrosive ink has begun to eat holes in the paper.
Photos by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
Books about sex, science, and politics were among the works selected for “Banned in Boston (and Beyond),” a Houghton Library pop-up exhibition that coincided with the American Library Association’s Banned Books Week.
“I think you’ll find very few librarians for whom the freedom to read and the freedom of access to information isn’t a very important topic, and that’s a reason I really wanted to do something about this subject,” said John Overholt, who organized the exhibition. “Because it means a lot to me.”
Overholt, who is Houghton’s curator of early books and manuscripts, embraced the chance to explore the University’s extensive collection of previously banned books.
“I learned so much about the collections in the process of digging through HOLLIS and seeing what things I could find,” he said.
Curator John Overholt speaks with colleague Karintha Lowe.
Sex and substances were well represented in the exhibition, which included a copy of D.H. Lawrence’s 1928 novel “Lady Chatterley’s Lover.” Also among the titles were William Powell’s “The Anarchist Cookbook” (1971), a counterculture text filled with recipes for weapons and drugs, and Madonna’s 1992 coffee table book “Sex,” which hardly met a obscenity watchdog it did not provoke.
Madonna had nothing on Copernicus, of course. A copy of the Renaissance astronomer’s “De revolutionibus orbium coelestium” (1543) reminded viewers of an era when work questioning the Earth’s position at the center of the universe was banned by the Catholic Church.
The idea to put on a banned books exhibition came partly from Hannah Marcus, a professor of the history of science at Harvard, who teaches a course on Galileo — a scientist persecuted for his heliocentric ideas.
“There are different subjects that are particularly in the censorial gaze at different times,” Marcus said. “We’re seeing that in our present as well, right? Heliocentrism not a problem. ‘Lady Chatterley’s Lover’ less of a problem. And instead … it’s the fixations of a particular period.”
Some of the exhibited books showed clear signs of disapproval, including expurgation. Others were unmarked, but had been kept hidden or under lock and key.
British novelist Ernest Raymond was among those recruited to attest to the literary merit of “Lady Chatterley’s Lover” in the 1960 obscenity trial against Penguin Books.
Walt Whitman’s “Leaves of Grass” was banned not necessarily for being explicit, but rather for the ideas it contained.
A rare early copy of “Howl” by Allen Ginsberg clandestinely printed on a mimeograph machine at San Francisco State University. The version published later that year by City Lights Press was seized for obscenity by U.S. Customs.
Giovanni Boccaccio’s “Stories of Boccaccio,” for example, was kept for decades in the “Inferno” section of Harvard’s Widener Library. This restricted section was a set of stacks behind metal gates that housed books containing erotic material, as well as some valuable early editions.
“I wanted to have as wide a span as possible,” Overholt said. “To show the ongoing history there is [of banning books].”
Also included in the exhibition were texts about same-sex relationships, such as a collection of Walt Whitman poems and Radclyffe Hall’s 1928 novel “The Well of Loneliness.” These books, Overholt said, were banned not necessarily for being explicit, but rather for the ideas contained within.
“One thing I wanted to highlight is how innocuous some of this does seem in retrospect,” he said. “I don’t think reading ‘The Well of Loneliness’ made anyone a lesbian, and I don’t think preventing anyone from reading ‘The Well of Loneliness’ prevented anyone from being a lesbian.”
Ultimately, he added, that’s why censorship is often doomed to fail.
“Because the books have a lot of power, but they don’t necessarily have that power.”
Her science writing is not for the squeamishIt takes a lot to gross out ‘Replaceable You’ author Mary Roach
It takes a lot to gross out ‘Replaceable You’ author Mary Roach
Alvin Powell
Harvard Staff Writer
5 min read
Mary Roach.
Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer
It is hard to gross out Mary Roach, but not impossible.
The science writer’s books have explored uncomfortable topics ranging from the afterlife of cadavers to the physiology of sex to the “alimentary canal” running from your mouth to your anus. She once visited a “body farm” in Tennessee where corpses are left to decompose to provide a time standard to determine time of death in murder and other cases.
“That was tough because it was visual and also olfactory, and at one point the researcher said, ‘If you put your ear really close, you can hear the maggots feeding,’” said Roach in a recent talk at Harvard’s Science Center. That maggot fest didn’t do it, though, in part because Roach said her fascination with her topics often outweighs her disgust or horror.
But then her home county medical examiner stepped to the plate. That official, Roach said, “made it a personal goal to gross me out.”
“And she did, one day, succeed. She just said, ‘Oh, you should come in this morning, there’s an interesting case.’ And I don’t need to describe that.”
It was a rare instance of Roach leaving things to the audience’s imagination, something her books — including her latest, “Replaceable You: Adventures in Human Anatomy,” published in September — don’t tend to do. Roach spoke to a packed lecture hall, responding to questions from fellow science writer Elizabeth Preston and members of the audience. Roach proved as engaging and taboo-breaking in person as she is on the page.
In the talk, sponsored by the Harvard Book Store, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences’ Division of Science, and Harvard Library, Roach said she starts with a broad topic of interest to her and then goes by instinct. When she hears of an interesting and illuminating fact, a finding, or some other wrinkle, she emails the researchers — she spends a lot of time emailing strangers, she said — and visits the site to see for herself. Sometimes those trips are a bust — not as interesting as she expected, or without the access she envisioned. She told of volunteering for an experiment that she thought would lead to a compelling article about how airplane seat ergonomics are tested. When she arrived, she was told she had to sit in the seat for eight hours.
“I sold it to this magazine and then I got there and it’s like, ‘You’re going to be sitting in this chair for eight hours.’ And that’s what it was,” Roach said. “I don’t think it was my most interesting piece.”
Usually, however, Roach said she can take away something from a trip and often gets more than she anticipated: “You don’t know until you get there.”
Her humorous approach to sometimes serious subjects involves walking a fine line, however, and she admitted she sometimes wobbles. That’s where her editors come in, highlighting when her intended light touch becomes disrespectful, or when her treatment of a subject is simply too much.
Her most recent book, “Replaceable You,” explores human efforts to repair and replace parts of the body. The book takes the reader through the early fumbling to sophisticated modern efforts at prosthetic limbs, joints, eyeballs, reproductive organs, and skin grafts. She describes an early effort at a skin graft where the skin remained attached to the donor animal — a dog in this case — in order to ensure blood flow and the graft’s survival on its human host. The account of the experiment, done by a French doctor in the 1800s, was in French, and when Roach saw that it involved a living dog, she assumed it was something small and portable.
Her most recent book, “Replaceable You,” explores human efforts to repair and replace parts of the body.
“It said ‘un chien danois’ and I thought, ‘Oh, Danish dog breeds.’ I’m not that familiar with Danish dog breeds but I’m picturing quite a small one because it’s going to be attached,” Roach said. “But, in fact, no. It was a Great Dane — and he complained about ‘mouvement continuelle excessif’ (excessive continual movement). And how do I — just because of the image — how do I not?”
Over the course of working on the project, Roach said she became convinced that the body is a marvel of evolutionary engineering, with each organ and part adapted nearly perfectly to its purpose. Human efforts to replicate them almost always fall short, she said.
“I did realize early on that the human body is such a miraculous machine and to think that you could create any component of it as good as what we’re born with, even something that is malfunctioning, and you could come up with a replacement,” Roach said. “There was a point where I thought I need to change the title. … Technically it should be ‘Irreplaceable.’”
Over 60 and onlineIn new book, law professor busts myths about ‘hapless grandparents’ in the digital age
In new book, law professor busts myths about ‘hapless grandparents’ in the digital age
Sy Boles
Harvard Staff Writer
7 min read
The fastest-growing demographic of internet users is people age 60 and older, but the group’s behavior online is poorly understood — and often stereotyped.
That’s according to John Palfrey, former executive director of the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society and a visiting professor at Harvard Law School.
In a new book called “Wired Wisdom: How to Age Better Online,” co-authored with the University of Zurich’s Eszter Hargittai, Palfrey busts common myths about how older adults relate to privacy, security, and connection in the digital age.
“Too often we have the image in our mind of a hapless grandparent or older person in our life who can’t turn on the new phone they’ve received or they can’t fix the blinking light on the VCR,” said Palfrey, who is now the president of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. “What we really wanted to do with this book is help make sure that the use of technology is actually a part of thriving in older age, and not something that’s a hardship for older people.”
In this interview with the Gazette, which has been edited for length and clarity, Palfrey explains what we get wrong about the online lives of over-60s, and what can be done to support older users of new tech.
What made you want to write about older adults’ online lives?
When I was at the Berkman Klein Center in the aughts, the early days of the internet, I co-wrote a book with Urs Gasser, “Born Digital: How Children Grow Up in a Digital Age.” I had two very small kids at the time, and there were real concerns about how kids use technology. I was thinking through, how do you raise kids in this time?
This book came about in a similar way. I have parents who are both roughly 80. They’re both wonderful and brilliant people, and sometimes technology is their friend, and sometimes it’s not. I thought, how do I engage as a middle-aged person in supporting older adults? What do the data tell us about the most useful things to do?
The book draws on external data, but you also contribute a new survey of 4,000 adults over 60. What stuck out to you from that research?
Many of the myths we hold are not entirely true, and I’ll give you one example that has to do with safety and security. We think about older people as totally helpless in that they’re constantly being scammed and so forth. But it turns out, when you dig into the data, that’s not the case. Older adults are more skeptical than younger people about scams, not less. In fact, they’re able to use their history and their life experience in a very positive way to apply themselves to these online scams.
What’s going on in the data is that older people are targeted way more than younger people. Why? Because they likely have more money, they may be less good with the technology itself, and sometimes they’re suffering from cognitive decline.
So the truth is not that older adults are completely helpless against scams. It’s that they’re facing way worse conditions, and we don’t give them the same kind of training and support that we give younger people. And some of them are sitting ducks as a result.
If we treat older adults like they don’t know anything, that’s not a very good starting point for figuring out the right interventions, whether it’s changing the design of the technology, creating new laws, or intervening as family members.
“Older adults are more skeptical than younger people about scams, not less. ”
John Palfrey.
Photo courtesy of the MacArthur Foundation
But you did find some real differences between the generations in terms of online privacy: Older adults tend to be much more skeptical about sharing personal information, whether that’s on social media or through medical alert systems that could be lifesaving. What advice do you have for navigating those conversations?
That’s right. For younger generations, everything in their life has been recorded, from their sonogram when their parent was pregnant to their baby pictures to their Little League games, and all of that is stored digitally. That’s just not true for their grandparents. There’s a big distinction coming in, and in their final chapters, older adults are having to grapple with that.
For me, that means we really shouldn’t assume too much about what people know about technology or what they will intuit, especially if they’ve been out of the workforce for a long time. They might not know how much data about them is being held by other people.
So is it really about talking to the older adults in your life and figuring out their specific needs and concerns?
Yes, I think so. This is one of the challenges: There’s a huge diversity within this age cohort, which shouldn’t be that surprising. At the MacArthur Foundation, where I work now, we have people in their 70s who do quarterly cybersecurity trainings — who are teaching the cybersecurity trainings. They just know it incredibly well. And then there are people who are exactly the same age, who haven’t been in the workforce at any point in the digital era, who know absolutely nothing about this stuff, who have no context for it.
How are older adults reckoning with the contradictions of social media — that it can both connect us and isolate us, inform us and misinform us?
It’s very much a mixed bag on both. That’s the reality for kids, too, and for those of us in the middle. Too much of it can be really harmful, but a decent dose can be a part of a positive life. To give an example, if you’re an older person and you live in Europe, and you can use WhatsApp to connect with a relative in the U.S., it can be life-giving to be able to send them texts and see their face once in a while. Having a healthy dose of social media can be a part of a strong social life.
What can be done to improve things?
The most important thing we could do is design technologies with older people in mind. Have you ever heard of older people being involved in the design of a new technology at, say, Apple? I don’t think that kind of thing is at the top of mind for those designing and carrying out these technologies. Generally speaking, new technologies are designed by quite young people for other young people, and we do little thinking about the experiences of older people. It could be as simple as font size.
We also focus on support. Great benefits can come from a grandchild connecting with their grandparent through the use of technology, helping them navigate that. The child can help the grandparent, but you also never know what skills and insights might go in the other direction. The grandchild is going to learn a whole pile of stuff from the grandparent in the process.
I really hope that as a society we focus more on treating our older adults better, really centering them in ways we don’t always today. You’ll hear people say that when we center people with disabilities in the way we build cities and buildings, we end up improving things for everybody. The same is going to be true for technology design: It’s going to become more universal as we design for older people. Particularly as artificial intelligence becomes more and more central, we urgently need to pay attention to how that’s going to affect the older population. We’ll benefit in untold ways if we do so.
‘How old are you? 70s? You’re JV, maybe next year.’Olympic gold winner Bill Becklean has been at crew for 75 years, will be coxing boat of octogenarians at Head of the Charles
Photos by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
‘How old are you? 70s? You’re JV, maybe next year.’
Alvin Powell
Harvard Staff Writer
8 min read
Olympic gold winner Bill Becklean has been at crew for 75 years, will be coxing boat of octogenarians at Head of Charles
Bill Becklean feels blessed to have taken up crew 75 years ago, when, as a 14-year-old from Missouri, someone told him he’d make a decent coxswain for his high school team.
“I came from Kansas City, Missouri, and never heard of anything called ‘crew,’” said Becklean, 89, who had traveled east to attend Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire. “I weighed 80 pounds, and somebody said, ‘Well, you ought to be a coxswain,’ and I was. Look where that has taken me.”
His most notable stop may be the 1956 summer Olympics in Melbourne, Australia, when his Yale University eight, with Becklean as coxswain, won gold. The latest will come Sunday on the Charles, when he will steer an extraordinary eight — one full of octogenarians — competing in the 2025 Head of the Charles: the Director’s Challenge mixed eights.
Becklean and his crew prepare for the upcoming competition on the Charles River.
Becklean’s boat is number 27 in the 30-boat field, which features eights with mixed men and women crews.
Becklean, who first volunteered for the Head of the Charles in 1966, is familiar with the three-mile course, which winds up the river separating Cambridge and Boston, passing under six bridges. He’s watched as the regatta has become one of the world’s largest and most prestigious.
Catherine Saarela, adult recreational sweeps coordinator at Brighton, Massachusetts-based Community Rowing Inc., is more sanguine about the Becklean’s group’s prospects.
It is a “set boat,” she said, meaning it’s well-balanced as it moves through the water, with consistent timing from the rowers, which increases efficiency and speed. Saarela said that’s probably because some of the rowers typically row singles, where they only have themselves to rely on to keep the boat centered and stable.
“It’s not the fastest boat,” Saarela said. “But it also hasn’t been the last boat to finish.”
The idea of an all-octogenarian boat was inspired by Saarela’s father, also an octogenarian and a cancer survivor.
About four years ago, he got an award from the YMCA for swimming 1,000 miles over the last 10 years, a feat Saarela pondered during her commute from her New Hampshire home to CRI’s Harry Parker Boathouse in Brighton. Once the idea of a boat crewed by rowers in their 80s popped up, it stuck around.
“I was coaching, and I’d go out and totally profile people: ‘Hey, do you know anyone who’s 80 and still rowing?’” Saarela said. “They’d say, ‘I’m not 80,’ and I’d say, ‘I didn’t ask if you were 80. Who do you know?’”
Seat by seat, she built the boat.
It was fellow referee Bill Barrett who suggested Becklean as coxswain.
“One of the other referees, who’s in his 80s, said, ‘Hey, you need a coxswain. You should reach out to Bill Becklean, he’s a gold medal coxswain,’ and I reached out,” Saarela said. “That’s how Bill became my partner in crime in all this.”
Edward Wertheim (from left), James Draper, DeLane Anderson, Peter McGowan, Judith Gillern, Priscilla Hoffnung, Elspeth McLaughlin, Anne Faber, and Becklean.
Saarela is just the latest to pull toward a shared goal with Becklean.
Over the decades he’s helped and been helped by many, in the sport and out, from the other skinny kids he shared a boat with at Phillips Exeter, to fellow volunteers in the Head of the Charles’ early years, to Yale’s medal-winning crew in Melbourne.
The road to gold was anything but smooth, Becklean said. Because Australia is in the southern hemisphere, the summer games were held in November, months after the end of the collegiate rowing season.
Instead of staying and training over the summer, the crew scattered to vacations and summer jobs.
They did get together on Connecticut’s Thames River for training sessions in the middle of August, but when the fall term started, the crew parted ways, and six, including Becklean, went back to campus.
“The first heats in Australia were the first race we’d had since the Olympic trials,” Becklean said.
And it showed. They lost their opening heat, which sent them to the repechage race, where losers of the early heats get a chance to fill open semifinal slots. Shaken by the initial loss, they won their repechage, then beat favorite Australia in the semifinals.
Both boats advanced, however, and Yale beat Australia again to win the gold.
Becklean graduated from Yale with an electrical engineering degree in 1958 and spent the next eight years out of rowing and in the Navy, where he worked on nuclear subs.
Then he left for Harvard Business School and the Charles River, where he couldn’t help noticing the Head of the Charles regatta, then in its second year. He approached legendary Harvard crew coach Harry Parker about volunteering.
A year later he joined the Cambridge Boat Club, where he now has been a member for more than 50 years. He is a past commodore and counts his coaching duties for Cambridge Rindge and Latin’s boys’ crew, based at the club, as “the best thing I’ve ever done.”
“I know this will change those boys’ lives, and it does,” Becklean said. “They learn how to show up on time. They learn how to follow instructions; they learn how to operate as a team; they learn that what you put in is what you get out. There are so many lessons that will be with them for their lives.”
Since then, he’s competed in the Head of the Charles regularly, coxing several boats and rowing, in singles or doubles, in 10 or 12 years.
“I have a doubles partner that I’ve rowed with for 25 years. We rowed it probably 10 times and won it one year, the first that they had an award for 70-year-olds,” Becklean said. “It was the year we turned 70, and we were the only boat in our age group. Then it got very competitive.”
Rooting for Becklean this year will be another rowing partner, Malcolm Salter, a former Harvard lightweight rower who’s been rowing doubles with him for several years.
Salter, HBS’ James J. Hill Professor of Business Administration, emeritus, and faculty fellow for Harvard lightweight crew, said he met Becklean six years ago when he visited the Cambridge Boat Club.
The two started talking and discovered that Becklean had been a student of Salter’s when Becklean was working toward his M.B.A. Now Salter, four years Becklean’s junior, has become something of a student of his.
“My goal is basically to be Bill Becklean,” Salter said. “My goal is to be able to be rowing in the Head of the Charles when I’m 90.”
Becklean, Salter said, has an eye for the sport’s more technical elements, things that can slow the boat: the errant splash of a misplaced blade or a seat sliding slightly out of time. Despite that, he doesn’t lose sight of the fact that rowing should be fun.
“He has total command and control of the boat because he has so much knowledge. He’s the ultimate collegial competitor,” Salter said. “He’s a carrier for the sport. He’s very supportive. He lives it. He loves to talk about it.”
Word has gotten out in the racing community, Saarela said, and older rowers are calling her.
This year — the fourth for the all-80s crew — she’ll have 15 rowers, with Becklean in the coxswain’s seat.
Seven will row downstream from Community Rowing on the Charles River to the race’s start near Boston University’s DeWolfe Boathouse, and seven more will race the three miles back.
One intrepid octogenarian will row both ways.
“I have not had a hard time filling seats,” Saarela said. “I’ve got one woman from Saratoga Springs who called me and wanted to do this. Plus, I’m a referee, I travel around, and I talk about it. I’ve got people who come up to me in their 70s: ‘Do you have an extra spot?’ I say, ‘How old are you? 70s? You’re JV, maybe next year.”
“Every time I come back from having rowed, it just feels so good. I’ll keep doing it as long as I can get in a boat. It’s been great fun.”
Becklean rowed his last single a few years ago after what for him was the “perfect” race: He had trained hard; conditions were ideal; he rowed well; and beat his desired time. He still rows doubles, though, and isn’t considering stepping away from the coxswain’s seat.
“I love the sport. My closest friends are all rowers. There are times when I’m driving in here and I say, ‘Do I really want to do this?’ but I’ll tell you, every time I come back from having rowed, it just feels so good,” Becklean said. “I’ll keep doing it as long as I can get in a boat. It’s been great fun.”
Harvard reports operating deficit amid federal funding cutsUniversity continues to advance teaching and research in face of significant financial challenges
Harvard reports operating deficit amid federal funding cuts
Harvard University.
Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
long read
University continues to advance teaching and research in face of significant financial challenges
With the release of Harvard University’s fiscal year 2025 financial report, the Gazette sat down with Executive Vice President Meredith Weenick and Vice President for Finance and Chief Financial Officer Ritu Kalra to discuss the University’s financial position amid evolving federal policy — from the termination and reinstatement of research funding to a forthcoming increase to the endowment tax.
This interview has been edited for clarity and length.
Fiscal year 2025 was marked by extraordinary disruption to Harvard’s research enterprise, including the termination of federally sponsored research grants. How did these developments affect the University’s financial position?
Kalra: The past year brought unprecedented challenges to Harvard and the higher education sector as a whole. The disruptions were particularly acute for our research community, but I don’t want to dismiss the breadth of the challenges across the University, including heightened concerns for our international students and scholars.
The termination of hundreds of research grants to Harvard did not occur in a vacuum. Heading into FY25, we were already contending with costs rising faster than our revenues, which, as we discussed last year, is not a sustainable path forward. The federal policy landscape began to change in early February, with proposals to cut contracted indirect cost reimbursement rates on active research and with terminations of dozens of individual awards affecting projects underway across our Schools. That was followed by the abrupt termination of nearly the entire portfolio of our direct federally sponsored research grants in the spring. About $116 million in sponsored funds — which are reimbursements for costs the University has already incurred — disappeared almost overnight.
It’s important to note that the terminations occurred on multi-year awards. The total value of the affected awards spans several years of work, not a single-year loss. The $116 million represents about two months of disrupted reimbursements in fiscal year 2025. Those disruptions continued in the ensuing months — the portfolio consists of over 900 direct awards to our faculty, at a cost of over $600 million a year. It has only been in the past few weeks, following Judge Allison Burrough’s summary judgment in U.S. District Court, that payments on those grants have been restored.
We closed the year with a $113 million operating deficit on a $6.7 billion revenue base. This is our first deficit since the pandemic.
Weenick: The result could have been far worse. Leadership across the University had already begun a process to identify strategic, structural, and sustainable reductions to our budgets, recognizing that changes to federal policy, including proposed caps on research-related funding and the impending increase to the endowment tax, would have significant consequences. While the outcome of individual policies was uncertain — and in some cases, still is — it was evident that, collectively, these measures would have a substantial financial impact. Accordingly, we instituted a hiring freeze across the University, paused salary increases for exempt staff, and delayed nonessential capital projects. We don’t take these measures lightly, and we are grateful to our community for their collective efforts.
We also benefited from the extraordinary generosity of our donors in support of the University. Their contributions were meaningful — over $100 million more than last year in current use giving, the highest in the University’s history. We are so grateful for their support.
Meredith Weenick.
Harvard file photo
Research is part of Harvard’s core mission. How has the University supported researchers through this period of uncertainty?
Weenick: The loss of federal funding was not only a financial challenge — it was a disruption to progress on critical, often lifesaving, research. Labs had to suspend experiments, research teams faced layoffs, and clinical trials were jeopardized.
Our response was immediate and multifaceted. We prioritized sustaining research continuity, both financially and operationally. The University created a $250 million research continuity fund, supplemented by additional resources from Schools, which ensured that critical projects could continue at the research-intensive Schools most impacted, including Harvard Medical School, the T.H. Chan School of Public Health, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, and the John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.
As Ritu mentioned, we’ve seen more than 900 awards reinstated and the payments for the majority of expenditures resume, following the federal court ruling that found those grant terminations to be unlawful. While this is welcome news, we must acknowledge that the relationship between research universities and the federal government is changing in fundamental ways. Looking ahead, we must be prepared for a future in which this long-standing partnership is less stable. Successfully navigating this period will depend on planning ahead, working together, and staying flexible.
With federal research grants now reinstated, how is Harvard managing the transition to resume research activity across the University?
Weenick: The court’s ruling was a critical step toward restoring a measure of stability for our research community. With funding now reinstated, researchers can once again focus on advancing the aims of their projects and rebuilding the momentum that was lost during the freeze.
At the same time, we’re being thoughtful about how we move forward. We’ve encouraged investigators to resume activity necessary to fulfill our commitments under the grants, but we’re also advising prudence, particularly in making new long-term or multi-year commitments. Our goal is to sustain the pace of discovery while planning responsibly amid uncertainty.
Kalra: From a financial standpoint, this transition is about sustaining our research commitments while staying disciplined. The reinstatement of grants has provided welcome relief, but we’re still managing the ripple effects of months of disruption and preparing for future volatility in both the funding of current projects and the outlook for new awards.
Ritu Kalra.
Harvard file photo
The endowment returned 11.9 percent in fiscal year 2025, bringing its value to $56.9 billion. How does this performance factor into Harvard’s financial health and capacity to address these challenges?
Kalra: We are deeply grateful to Narv Narvekar and his colleagues at Harvard Management Company for their stewardship of the endowment. Their disciplined, long-term approach is critical to ensuring that the endowment continues to provide stability and continuity, even through periods of great uncertainty. Distributions from the endowment provided $2.5 billion in support — nearly 40 percent of Harvard’s total operating revenue.
These funds are vital to Harvard’s financial health. And they are funds, plural; not singular. The endowment is made up of nearly 15,000 individual funds, the vast majority of which are given for a specific purpose. Endowed gifts made for museum collections cannot be repurposed to support research discoveries in neurobiology or astrophysics. They are not fungible or available to support purposes other than the donor’s intentions.
That’s also why the endowment is not an infinite source we can draw on to close structural budget gaps. It’s designed to provide steady, sustainable support across generations. A temporary increase in the draw from the endowment can provide momentary relief, but we are facing structural changes to the financial model that underpins higher education. We can use the endowment to support us in this transition, but we cannot use the endowment as a shield against reality.
Harvard is also facing an increase in the federal endowment tax, enacted by Congress earlier this year. How is the University preparing to manage the impact of that tax increase?
Kalra: We refer to the tax in shorthand as the endowment tax, but in reality, it is an excise tax on the income from our investments. The first year that Harvard will make tax payments at the new rate is fiscal year 2027, but we will have to recognize the obligation on our balance sheets this year — fiscal year 2026 — and we are working diligently, in partnership with our colleagues at HMC, to manage its financial impact.
While we are awaiting additional guidance from the U.S. Treasury Department, under the new law we expect Harvard’s tax obligation could be in the range of $300 million each year. That means hundreds of millions of dollars that will not be available to support financial aid, research, and teaching. To put that in a bit clearer context, in fiscal year 2025 Harvard spent over $750 million in financial aid and scholarships for students across the University. Every two to three years, we could be paying the equivalent of our entire financial aid budget in taxes.
That’s a significant impact and change to our financial planning, and it highlights why maintaining discipline today is so important. How we manage the endowment’s distribution in the near term will directly shape Harvard’s ability in the future to invest in its mission — and in the people and ideas that define it.
The University issued $1.2 billion in new debt this fiscal year. What drove that decision, and how does it position Harvard for the future?
Kalra: Issuing debt this year was a deliberate and strategic decision to bolster Harvard’s liquidity and maintain momentum on essential capital projects at a time of considerable uncertainty. Prudent use of debt is a normal part of how universities manage their finances — it allows us to invest responsibly in the facilities and infrastructure that support our academic mission over the long term.
The proceeds from the debt issuances help us continue to advance key priorities, including housing renewal projects and developments in Allston. Our AAA/Aaa ratings reflect external confidence in Harvard’s financial position and our commitment to navigate a complex and changing environment with discipline and foresight.
With increased financial pressures, how does Harvard balance near-term constraints with long-term commitments to its people and mission?
Weenick: Harvard’s strength has always been its people. Even as we tighten budgets, our focus remains on supporting faculty, students, and staff — ensuring that the work of discovery and education continues.
With payments on our grants largely restored — at least for now — we have begun to shift out of the research continuity framework we put in place in the spring and are allowing researchers to resume the full level of work necessary to advance the aims of their hard-won grants.
Kalra: The reinstatements of those grants do not erase the disruption the terminations sparked, nor do they negate the uncertainty ahead. That means we can’t simply return to “business as usual.” We need to focus our resources on academic excellence, operate more efficiently, and explore new revenue streams. The long-term trajectory of federal support for research, the increase to the endowment tax, and the broader economic climate require us to adapt structurally.
Harvard’s ability to endure and thrive has always depended on disciplined stewardship paired with bold investment in our mission. Our challenge now is to continue that tradition — to sustain academic excellence while being prudent stewards of the University’s resources.
What are the University’s financial priorities as we enter fiscal year 2026?
Kalra: The financial landscape remains extraordinarily challenging. The federal government has indicated it will appeal the court decision that reinstated our grants, and they’ve also indicated that they will consider other actions that could impact our ability to seek federal grant funding in the future. Other significant headwinds include proposed overall reductions in federal research funding and other policies that could upend the long-standing partnership between universities and the federal government as co-investors in the infrastructure that research relies on. The University has made extensive investments in the infrastructure that enables research — in wet labs and sophisticated equipment such as a cryo-electron microscope that allows for 3D imaging of wisps of proteins. Cuts to indirect cost recovery — coupled with an increase to the excise tax on endowment income — bear directly on our ability to invest in these essential tools of cutting-edge science. And we don’t yet know how the tariffs will unfold. Taken together, these factors could cost Harvard $1 billion annually.
Even against this backdrop, the University’s fiscal discipline, the resilience of our community, and the continued generosity of our donors should continue to position us well. Our focus will be on balancing prudence with purpose — managing expenses carefully, safeguarding liquidity, and sustaining investments that advance excellence in teaching and research. The circumstances are challenging, but our mission and our commitment to it remain unchanged.
Weenick: That’s right. These are challenging times, not just for Harvard but for universities throughout the nation. Every School across the University is feeling enormous pressure to adapt to a more constrained environment. We’ll need to work differently, rethink how we deliver services, and make difficult choices about what we can sustain. This is also an opportunity to reimagine how we work together to support Harvard’s mission. While periods like this are difficult, they help us focus on what’s essential and strengthen the institution for the long term.
Was ‘Aeneid’ critiquing or glorifying empire?Authors of new translation dig into lasting impact of epic that Virgil wanted burned
Authors of new translation dig into lasting impact of epic that Virgil wanted burned
Composed between 29 and 19 B.C. by the Roman poet Virgil, “The Aeneid” tells the story of the Trojan hero Aeneas and the founding of Rome while exploring themes of duty, fate, and struggle. Published after Virgil’s death in 19 B.C., despite his wish for it to be burned because he considered it unfinished, the epic poem remains a monumental work of classic literature.
Scott McGill and Susannah Wright, Ph.D. ’24, classics professors at Rice University, recently published a new translation of the poem with an introduction by Emily Wilson, the prominent classicist and translator of Homer’s “Iliad” and “Odyssey.” In an interview with the Gazette, which has been edited for clarity and length, Wright and McGill discussed the poem’s role as Rome’s national epic, and the questions it poses to modern readers as a celebration of imperial power and a meditation on the costs of conquest for both victors and victims.
How do you explain the poem’s enduring appeal to this day?
Wright: Above all, it is a really compelling story. It includes everything from epic battle scenes and adventures at sea to a tragic love affair and a journey to the underworld, and it also speaks to themes that remain relevant to many readers today — how to balance private desire and public duty, how to keep going when all seems lost, and how to determine the obligations we have to future generations. The poem is also very interested in questions about the ethics of migration, because the Trojans are, in a sense, at once both refugees and conquerors.
McGill: The poem also has a lot to tell us about the relationship between poetry and power because it was written as a national epic under the emperor Augustus, and in some ways, for Augustus. And yet, Virgil shows a great deal of artistic independence. It would appear that Virgil takes his poem in a different direction than we suspect Augustus would have anticipated. That possibly illustrates Virgil’s heroic temperament as an artist, and Augustus’ tolerance for different perspectives and different points of view.
Virgil died before the publication of “The Aeneid.” What do historians say about Virgil’s wishes to burn his work and why was it published regardless of his wishes?
McGill: There have been different interpretations. One is simply that Virgil had planned to revise “The Aeneid,” but he got sick and died. We know that the poem is incomplete because there are incomplete lines, and he would not have kept them in the work and had it published. It’s a story that may be meant to illustrate his perfectionism as a poet, but there is political interpretation, and this was taken up by the writer Hermann Broch, who wrote that Virgil’s wish to burn his poem was a protest because it could be used to justify absolute power. It’s completely speculative, but the story has been used to say that Virgil didn’t want to create a poem that can glorify autocracy. Of course, the follow-up to that story is that Augustus saved the poem, had one of Virgil’s friends edit it, and ordered its publication; and it has been in circulation ever since.
Wright: Virgil’s epic can certainly be read as glorifying the Augustan regime, and therefore as having a celebratory, perhaps even propagandistic approach to Roman power. But the other side is that Virgil takes a lot of care in illustrating the costs of that power. In many cases, he reserves his deepest sympathy for the characters who oppose the Trojans’ destined mission, those who resist them and who become victims of Aeneas and his followers — and in that way, the poem can also be interpreted as a sophisticated critique of Roman imperialism.
What do you hope your translation would reveal to new readers of “The Aeneid”?
McGill: We hope that it reveals the deep humanity of the poem, the profound sympathy that it shows to all its characters, and the richness of its emotional world. Epic poetry, especially if you’re a young reader, can feel like something you have to do, but not necessarily enjoy. Our hope is that the poem can come alive, and not only through the story, which is an incredible story, but also in the richness of its humane vision.
“We hope that it reveals the deep humanity of the poem, the profound sympathy that it shows to all its characters, and the richness of its emotional world.”
Scott McGill
Wright: There are two big misconceptions that readers often have about “The Aeneid.” One of them is that it’s merely a kind of propaganda piece for the Roman empire and for the Augustan regime. The other is that it’s a flat rehashing of Homer and isn’t engaging creatively with the “Iliad” and the “Odyssey.” To us, “The Aeneid” is neither of those things, but something much deeper and much richer. We hope that our translation will enable readers to connect with the immediacy and the urgency of the questions this ancient poem still poses today.
Virgil took inspiration from Homer’s masterpieces. What are the differences between the two authors?
McGill: Virgil is deeply reliant on Homer, but where Virgil takes Homer and the epic tradition in a new direction is in his understanding of and depiction of the hero. In Homer, the hero is concerned with his own glory, with accumulating fame, kleos in Greek. Virgil makes Aeneas a new kind of hero, who’s not so committed to his own kleos, but to history and to public duty, serving the Trojan refugees that he’s leading, and making sure that they get to Italy. Whereas the Homeric hero is all about accumulating personal glory, the Virgilian hero is about self-sacrifice; putting one’s own needs second to what one has to do for history and for the community.
“That illustrates the depth of Virgil’s engagement with Homer: this isn’t a flat reproduction of what we see in the ‘Iliad’ and ‘Odyssey,’ but a masterful and creative response to those poems. That’s part of the power of Virgil’s epic.”
Susannah Wright
Wright: Aeneas’ journey in the first half of the poem resembles the “Odyssey,” and the battlefield scenes in the second half certainly call to mind the “Iliad.” But it’s a complicated dynamic. When we leave Aeneas at the end of the poem, he’s caught up in a frenzied rage that might make us think of Achilles. At the end of the “Iliad,” though, Achilles shows mercy and has a profound moment of reconciliation with his enemy; Aeneas, in contrast, gives in to fury. That illustrates the depth of Virgil’s engagement with Homer: this isn’t a flat reproduction of what we see in the “Iliad” and “Odyssey,” but a masterful and creative response to those poems. That’s part of the power of Virgil’s epic.
How did “The Aeneid” come to be the founding myth of the Roman empire?
Wright: The story of Aeneas as a precursor to the Roman people goes back prior to Virgil, to the fifth and fourth centuries B.C., when Greek historians began to connect Aeneas with Rome as a founding figure and trace Roman ancestry back to the Trojans. Virgil doesn’t, by any means, invent Aeneas, but he gives Aeneas, who was a relatively minor figure in Homer’s “Iliad,” new primacy at the center of his epic. During Virgil’s time, Augustus emerged, after the Battle of Actium in 31 B.C., as the first emperor of Rome, and it was as this new regime was being consolidated in the 20s B.C. that Virgil wrote “The Aeneid.”
McGill: Augustus wanted to promote cultural renewal, which for him meant a return to Rome’s origins and its foundational virtues. “The Aeneid” certainly fits with that. It’s a two-pronged foundation myth for Rome, where you’ve got the Trojans on the one hand, and then you’ve got Romulus and Remus on the other. The Romans reconcile this by making Aeneas the ancestor of Romulus and Remus.
No translation is absolute. How close to the original is your translation of Virgil’s epic?
McGill: We certainly were committed to staying as close to the Latin as possible. We wanted to remain true to the substance and content and especially the tone and feel of the poem as well as the language. Virgil’s Latin largely comprises everyday words, and we wanted to make sure that our language reflected that as well. On the formal level, we translated the poem into blank verse; unrhymed iambic pentameter, which is the cultural equivalent to Virgil’s dactylic hexameter.
Wright: The particular metrical pattern that we chose has had a long life in the English tradition, as a meter associated with epic verse. In addition to employing a cultural equivalent to Virgil’s meter, we also did our best to capture his poetic devices and sound effects, because we wanted to approximate as much as we could the experience of reading the poem in Latin.
When your English teacher writes a book on Taylor SwiftProfessor Stephanie Burt examines star’s influence, work ethic, why her music matters
When your English teacher writes a book on Taylor Swift
Professor Stephanie Burt examines star’s influence, work ethic, why her music matters
Eileen O’Grady
Harvard Staff Writer
7 min read
Stephanie Burt.
Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
When Stephanie Burt decided to carry a pink and blue Taylor Swift tote bag to class one day in fall 2023, she just thought it would be a fun way to transport her books and laptop, and let her students know she was a Swiftie.
“No part of this journey was anything I expected,” said Burt, who realized there was interest in a Swift course after some students spotted her bag and asked her to supervise their independent research work on the pop singer. “I figured I would have a Taylor Swift seminar, and there would be eight or 10 or 15 Swifties, and we’d have a big wooden table, and we would talk about how her songs worked and study them in conjunction with relevant poems and novels and other pieces of writing. Then 200 people showed up.”
In her new book, “Taylor’s Version: The Poetic and Musical Genius of Taylor Swift,” Burt draws on both her teachings and her experience as both literary critic and pop music enthusiast to examine the singer-songwriter’s body of work, and the community of fans it inspires.
In this edited conversation with the Gazette, Burt shares her thoughts on Swift’s influence as a songwriter who remains both aspirational and relatable, and defined by an intense work ethic.
Did teaching the Taylor Swift course give you any new perspectives, either about Swift or about teaching?
I got to know her work better, especially the parts of her work that were not already my favorites.
I got to know the first album much better than I would have otherwise — you can really hear her becoming herself in real time as you go from one song to the next.
“I got to know the first album much better than I would have otherwise — you can really hear her becoming herself in real time as you go from one song to the next. “
And I got to know her album “Reputation,” which is probably still her most controversial album, where she makes the most visible break from what she had been trying to do before.
I also learned a lot about the ups and downs and the entertainment value and the limits of teaching a very large humanities course.
I don’t know that I’m going to try to teach a course of that size again. I certainly expect the Taylor class to run every few years for as long as there’s student interest, but I may make it a seminar next time.
In your book, you suggest that Swift’s success is due, in part, to singing songs she wrote herself. Why is that important?
If you go back far enough in the history of Western song forms, there’s no reason why the vocal interpreter of the song needs to be the person who wrote the song.
But after the rise of the Beatles and Bob Dylan in the mid-’60s, you get a strong expectation in parts of popular music — and an openness to it in others — that the songwriter be the singer. The openness provides an opportunity for Taylor when she’s in her teens starting out and sees herself principally as a songwriter.
One of the reasons why she walked away from her first chance at a major label contract in Nashville was that if she had gone with that contract, she would have been required to sing songs she didn’t write.
I think it’s largely accurate to see all of the things that Taylor has learned to do as being in the service of getting the songs that she writes. She learns to be a dancer; she learns co-organize a stage company as someone who’s very hands-on about her own touring; she gets to be a better and more consistent singer; she learns to put a tremendous amount of energy into fan relations and other kinds of marketing.
She demonstrates all of these skills, without which she would not have become the economic titan that she is.
What do you mean when you write that Swift is both aspirational and relatable?
She’s able to write many different songs that allow a sympathetic listener at once to say, “I have a lot in common with her, she really gets me,” and “I like to imagine being her, I wish I was more like her.”
The fact that she can do both of those things, not only in the same career but in the same song, and that she does them so often and with such formal variety, that’s really the core of why she’s so good.
“The fact that she can do both of those things, not only in the same career but in the same song, and that she does them so often and with such formal variety, that’s really the core of why she’s so good.”
Look at the title track from “Red.” On the one hand, it would be great to be able to imagine the thrill of being in a Maserati going many miles an hour — you’re in this sleek machine; life is going by; and everything is excitement.
On the other hand, many of us have had the experience of falling for someone and feeling like things are happening so fast that it’s scary. The sense, from “Red,” is that she’s been there too. She is able to write words and music that are both attractive and exciting to think about and also reach out to who we’ve already been.
You also write, importantly, about Swift’s work ethic.
She does a lot of work to get and stay popular: interviews, going on TV, doing appearances, touring. Within the songs, she writes about how she can’t stop working. She can’t slow down.
The song ”Mastermind” is probably the best example of that. She is always afraid things will be taken away from her, and she’s always trying to get to the next thing and sort of outrun her brain weasels.
I think a lot of us see that aspect in our own lives, especially people at Harvard. If you never stop working and you never slow down, you’ll never have to confront your self-doubt. That’s honestly one of the reasons that I personally have gradually become such a big Swiftie — there’s a lot I want to do. If I slow down and stop, maybe I won’t be worth anything, and maybe it will all just go away, so I have to never stop working.
Fortunately, I like working. It’s not terribly healthy, but it’s very American, and it’s one of the things Taylor sings about.
Has writing and teaching Swift changed the way that you listen to her music now?
One of the ways that I know that I’ve made a good choice when I decide to write about something is that when you make a good choice you’re more into it at the end than at the start.
I was at a karaoke event last week, and I sang “I Can Do it With a Broken Heart.” It is a song that requires you to breathe in challenging, counterintuitive ways.
Taylor tells you at the beginning of the second verse, “I can hold my breath / I’ve been doin’ it since he left.” It’s one more case of playful self-referentiality.
I learned even more about the song, which I had already written about at length. With my favorite Taylor works, there’s just always more there.
Researchers report ‘astounding’ obesity surge in U.S.Prevalence rises to 70 percent under definition that includes measures other than just BMI
Researchers report ‘astounding’ obesity surge in U.S.
Mass General Brigham Communications
4 min read
Prevalence rises to 70 percent under definition that includes measures other than just BMI
The prevalence of obesity in the U.S. could rise sharply under a new definition of the condition released earlier this year by the Lancet Diabetes and Endocrinology Commission, according to research co-authored by Harvard-Mass General specialists.
Investigators from Harvard and Mass General Brigham found that when applying the new criteria, which expand upon the traditional use of body mass index (BMI) to include measures of body fat distribution, the prevalence of obesity increased from about 40 percent to about 70 percent among more than 300,000 people included in the study. The rise was more pronounced among older adults.
Additionally, the researchers found that the newly added individuals also had a higher risk of adverse health outcomes. The results are published in JAMA Network Open.
“We already thought we had an obesity epidemic, but this is astounding,” said co-first author Lindsay Fourman, a Mass General endocrinologist and an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School. “With potentially 70 percent of the adult population now considered to have excess fat, we need to better understand what treatment approaches to prioritize.”
Traditionally, obesity has been defined by BMI, which estimates body fat based on a person’s weight and height. But other anthropomorphic measures — such as waist circumference, waist-to-height ratio, or waist-to-hip ratio — may further account for fat distribution and aid in differentiation between muscle and fat mass.
Under the new framework, a person is classified as having obesity if they have a high BMI plus at least one elevated anthropometric measure (a condition the authors term “BMI-plus-anthropometric obesity”), or if they have a normal BMI and at least two elevated anthropometric measures (a condition termed “anthropometric-only obesity”).
The new definition also distinguishes between preclinical and clinical obesity, with clinical obesity defined as the presence of obesity-related physical impairment or organ dysfunction. At least 76 organizations have endorsed the new guidelines, including the American Heart Association and the Obesity Society.
The study analyzed participants in the National Institutes of Health All of Us Research Program’s cohort of more than 300,000 Americans. Obesity prevalence was 68.6 percent with the new definition, versus 42.9 percent under the traditional BMI-based definition. This increase was entirely driven by inclusion of individuals with anthropometric-only obesity. Obesity rates varied by sex, race, and especially by age — affecting nearly 80 percent of adults over 70.
Importantly, the study found that those with anthropometric-only obesity — who would not have been classified as having obesity by the traditional definition — had a higher risk of diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and mortality than people without obesity. About half of all individuals who met the new obesity criteria had clinical obesity, and this proportion was only slightly lower in the anthropometric-only obesity group compared with the BMI-plus-anthropometric obesity group.
“We have always recognized the limitations of BMI as a single marker for obesity because it doesn’t take into account body fat distribution,” said senior author Steven Grinspoon of Mass General and Harvard Medical School. “Seeing an increased risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes in this new group of people with obesity, who were not considered to have obesity before, brings up interesting questions about obesity medications and other therapeutics.”
The researchers emphasized that further studies are needed to better understand the causes of and optimal treatments for anthropometric-only obesity. The team previously developed a therapeutic that reduces waist circumference, and plans to explore the utility of different treatment strategies in this newly defined population.
“Identifying excess body fat is very important as we’re finding that even people with a normal BMI but with abdominal fat accumulation are at increased health risk,” Fourman said. “Body composition matters — it’s not just pounds on a scale.”
The research described in this article received funding from the National Institutes of Health.
Putin doesn’t care what we thinkJournalists Baker and Glasser explore how Russian leader has interpreted, defied ambitions of U.S. leaders
Journalists Baker and Glasser explore how Russian president has interpreted, defied ambitions of U.S. leaders
Christina Pazzanese
Harvard Staff Writer
6 min read
Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Getty Images
Vladimir Putin, who rose to power in late 1999 as acting president of the Russian Federation following the resignation of Boris Yeltsin, is three years from surpassing Josef Stalin as Russia’s longest-serving leader of the last two centuries.
On Oct. 7 — Putin’s 73rd birthday — the Gazette spoke with Susan Glasser ’90, a staff writer for The New Yorker, and her husband, Peter Baker, chief White House correspondent for The New York Times, about the Russian leader and the five U.S. presidents he’s faced during his 25-plus years in office, a topic they’re exploring for a forthcoming book. Glasser and Baker, fall fellows at the Institute of Politics, reported from Moscow on Putin’s early years in office, work that shaped their 2005 book “Kremlin Rising.”
This conversation has been edited for clarity and length.
When you were reporting from Moscow, did you ever envision Putin would still be in power 25 years later?
Glasser: No, and anyone who tells you that they did is not being honest (laughs). There were plenty of people who were very clear-eyed from the beginning about Putin’s origins in the KGB, his suspicions of the West, his lamentation about Russia’s lost empire. We knew plenty of people in Moscow and some people in the United States who saw that he was no democrat, that he was no long-term friend of the United States. That was not such an outlier belief. I can’t think of a single person, whatever their ideological views about Russia, who saw in Putin the possibility to break Stalin’s record.
Peter Baker and Susan Glasser at Harvard.
Harvard file photo
Which U.S. president had the best read on Putin?
Baker: What we found striking is that all of them, Republican or Democrat, came into office thinking they could manage him. And to each of them, Putin has been a singular challenge who proves not to be manageable. They did not, in fact, get out of him what they thought they could get out of him or keep him where they thought they could keep him, all the way up to the present day.
Glasser: One of the things that is notable is that many of them started out the Putin era with the idea that Russia’s period of post-Soviet weakness was just going to continue. The big mistake, according to this argument, would be not that we misread Putin (although I think many did) but that we misread Russia, and we made the mistake of believing our own fairy tale about a world where geopolitical Great Power competition somehow had faded away. That, obviously, was a misreading of history. We certainly didn’t foresee a “no limits” alliance between Russia and China, and made the mistake of projecting forward the rift between Russia and China that had persisted from the late Soviet era.
American presidents, Democrats and Republicans, made the mistake of overvaluing a personal relationship with Putin, as if it would really matter in the end against these bigger geopolitical forces. It looked bad at the time, and it looks even worse now, when George W. Bush said that he “looked into his soul and saw Putin as a man he could do business with.” That overlooked Putin’s background in the KGB and his habit of saying what his interlocutors wanted to hear. It’s so important to underscore that multiple presidents, not just George W. Bush, made inaccurate judgments about who Putin was and what he was going to do.
Is there one U.S. president Putin preferred or particularly disliked over the others?
Baker: I think, at first, he thought he had a good relationship with George W. Bush; that they did see eye-to-eye. The two of them met more than any American and Russian leaders in history, and they were friendly. And yet, from Putin’s point of view, what he would say is, “I hear these things from presidents, they all say these things, but the policy stays the same.” And I think he has come to the conclusion that it doesn’t matter who is president because America is still going to do what America does, and that the president can say whatever they want, but it doesn’t change that. Even with Trump, whatever Putin thought of Trump coming in — whether he was somebody who could be manipulated, somebody he could manage — I think he still came away from his experiences with Trump thinking, “I didn’t get what I want out of this.” It’s not about the individual president.
What’s a fundamental misunderstanding people have about Putin?
Glasser: For years, many of the Russia experts in and out of the government that we respected the most were of the view that Putin was an insecure leader, and that a lot of what he did was driven by the need to shore up a not very strong system or to stay in power or to make sure that unrest didn’t happen inside Russia.
When he came back to power after the Medvedev interregnum and there were huge protests in the streets of St. Petersburg and Moscow, it was the biggest challenge to Putin’s tenure in the entire quarter century. And so, I think a smart explanation has been that from then on forward, Putin was determined to have a much tighter control on Russia — that he pivoted right in terms of how he governed the country and in terms of his foreign policy, that he was not tolerant of any kind of dissent, and that that really set him on the path that we see today. That is a compelling explanation.
Baker: He doesn’t care about what we care about. He doesn’t care about what we think he should care about, and we should stop trying to see him through our own lens because that’s not the way he sees the world. We think he should want his country to be strong economically and part of a vibrant international economy and world order, that that would be better for his people. Certainly, when we were there, we saw even in four years how much life got better for a lot of Russians because they were more integrated with the West, because they were economically developing. And he didn’t care that he closed it off. He doesn’t care that tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, of Russians have been killed or wounded in Ukraine. He doesn’t care that more than a million Russians have left the country — the brain drain from Russia is staggering. He doesn’t care that he has squandered a lot of things that he could have claimed as his successes over the last 25 years with this invasion of Ukraine. We need to see him in a clear-eyed way, rather than trying to see him through our own Western lens.
How sexism in medicine continues to endanger women’s healthRadcliffe symposium explores persistent bias in care today, from marginalizing heart disease symptoms to over-diagnosing anxiety
How sexism in medicine continues to endanger women’s health
Breast cancer specialist Elizabeth Comen (right) with Janet Rich-Edwards.
Photos by Veasey Conway/Harvard Staff Photographer
Alvin Powell
Harvard Staff Writer
5 min read
Radcliffe symposium explores persistent bias in care today, from marginalizing heart disease symptoms to over-diagnosing anxiety
It is past time for women’s health to move beyond “boobs and tubes” — as one expert termed the field’s reproductive focus — to address the disparities and prejudice that have hindered medical providers from effectively treating more than half of the population.
That’s according to experts who gathered for the Gellert Family Science Symposium held recently at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study examining persistent gaps between men’s and women’s healthcare.
The event’s keynote speaker was Elizabeth Comen, a breast cancer specialist and author of the 2024 book “All in Her Head: The Truth and Lies Early Medicine Taught Us about Women’s Bodies and Why It Matters Today.” She pointed out that women have twice the risk of Alzheimer’s disease as men, and that heart attack symptoms common among women such as jaw pain and indigestion are described medically as “atypical.”
“There’s so much focus on our reproductive health but there are so many other aspects to women’s health, like atypical heart disease,” said Comen, associate professor of health and co-director of the Women’s Health Collective at NYU Langone Health. “But when I was in Medical School all I learned about was that women’s chest pain was ‘atypical’ even though we’re greater than 50 percent of the population and heart disease is the No. 1 killer of women.”
Comen, who graduated from Harvard Medical School in 2004 and Harvard College in 2000, reviewed the history of how the medical system has discounted women’s health concerns. It partly stems from the fact that historically doctors were male and viewed what was normal and abnormal through the lens of the male body. Women were viewed as emotional to the extent that female “hysteria” was in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders until 1980, Comen said. Prevailing attitudes focused on control, promoted shame, and spotlighted women’s sexuality out of proportion to their actual healthcare needs.
Women were viewed as emotional to the extent that female “hysteria” was in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders until 1980.
Elizabeth Comen
“The question is, how does this show up in our healthcare system today? Because we’re so evolved. But are we?” said Comen, who was interviewed by Janet Rich-Edwards, director of life course epidemiology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and associate professor at Harvard Medical School and the Harvard T.H. Chan school of Public Health.
The legacy of those attitudes endures today, Comen said, in examining rooms where physicians speaking with male cancer patients are twice as likely to discuss potential sexual dysfunction than they are with women in the same circumstances, and in plastic surgery suites where, anecdotally, male doctors routinely suggest larger breast implants, and in hospitals where anxiety is over-diagnosed in women, dismissing valid health concerns.
She cited a case of a 34-year-old metastatic breast cancer patient whose disease had spread throughout her body extensively enough that Comen thought she didn’t have long to live. The woman, who had been orphaned, had no family support, and had lived through significant trauma, received medication that dramatically reduced the cancer. A few years later when the pandemic hit, the woman got COVID and was admitted with stuttered speech, tremors, and other stroke-like symptoms, but was dismissed as being anxious. Comen insisted on a neurology consult.
“I was thinking, I’ve met this woman when she was the most anxious she’s ever been in her life. Something is really wrong,” Comen said. “In the next room, I had a woman who also had COVID, no history of anxiety, and was eating her hand to her bone. There was something neurological going on in these women’s brains. I didn’t know what it was. There are many stories of this, when you think about endometriosis and the things that women have gone through and been told it’s all in their heads, when we really just didn’t invest in figuring out what’s going on.”
The picture of women’s health isn’t all bad, speakers said. The factors that have buoyed health in the general population — improved sanitation, vaccines, antibiotics — have not passed women by. In fact, women globally have longer life expectancies than men. Deborah Kado, professor of medicine, chief of geriatric research at Stanford University School of Medicine, and co-director of the Stanford Center on Longevity, said a girl born today can expect to live to 100, decades longer than expectations a century ago. Even that apparent good news, though has a dark lining: Women can expect to spend 12 to 15 years at the end of their lives in poor health, significantly longer than men.
Colin Hill, co-founder and chief executive officer of Aitia, which is leveraging artificial intelligence to discover new therapeutics, said things are about to change for the better. Medical science understands disease at a fundamental level — the interplay of genes and proteins — in a woefully small number of conditions, just 5 percent. The powerful artificial intelligence tools being developed and deployed today have the potential to change the medical landscape, leading to deeper understandings of the other 95 percent.
“We’re now on the precipice of real change across a number of diseases, especially those diseases that particularly affect women,” Hill said, “because we now have the chance to start to reverse-engineer the actual complex system of interacting genes and proteins that drive clinical outcomes.”
Want Americans to love EVs? Fix this.U.S. consumers aren’t thinking about daily needs when buying a car, says former GM chief economist
U.S. consumers aren’t thinking about daily needs when buying a car, says former GM chief economist
Anna Lamb
Harvard Staff Writer
5 min read
Compared to gasoline-powered cars, electric vehicles can save money at the pump, produce less harmful emissions, and avoid high maintenance costs. Why then, are so few Americans switching to EVs? The main reason, according to Elaine Buckberg, senior fellow at Harvard’s Salata Institute for Climate and Sustainability, is the hassle of charging on the go.
In a recent talk at Harvard Kennedy School, Buckberg, a former chief economist for General Motors, explored the realities of commuting with an electric vehicle, and why the lack of charging infrastructure is preventing the shift in consumer behavior needed to reduce transportation emissions.
Transportation accounts for 28 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, and light-duty vehicles like passenger cars account for a total of 17 percent.
“We need to fix charging to sell EVs, to take internal combustion engine cars off the road over time and avoid emissions,” Buckberg said.
Realities for drivers
According to Buckberg, most electric vehicles on the market have a range of 230 miles or more on a single charge. For most Americans, that’s an average week of driving.
But consumers aren’t thinking about their daily, or even weekly, habits when considering making the switch to an electric vehicle, said Buckberg. What car buyers want is a vehicle that can reliably take them on a cross-country trip should the need arise.
“There’s no one-stop app to find chargers, which means it can be hard to find out whether a charger is working. Who’s responsible? Who do you tell when it’s broken? So they don’t get fixed.”
Elaine Buckberg
“What if some weekend, they needed to take both kids and drop them off in different places, one at a soccer match and one had, I don’t know, dance competition, and they were both long-distance,” she said. “That might be a problem.”
At present, Buckberg said, most EV owners are also homeowners with access to at-home charging. But public infrastructure — which would be crucial to expand EV ownership — is still spotty.
“So people who can’t charge at home, or maybe can’t also charge in their workplace, they’re really going to rely on public charging,” she said. “That’s generally city dwellers and renters.”
Publicly available chargers — including both Level 2, which take roughly three to five hours to reach a full charge, and fast chargers that can reach a nearly full charge in around 20 minutes — currently sit at around 61,000 across the country, according to Buckberg. That’s up from 46,000 last year.
“But not nearly keeping up with the stock of EVs,” she added.
For comparison, there are more than double the amount of gas-fueling stations in the U.S. — many with multiple pumps for use.
Buckberg added that there is little reliability in a charger working, and a lack of real-time data for drivers. According to her research, only 34 percent of charging stations share real-time data that apps like Chargepoint and PlugShare use to inform their users on where to plug in. On some of the highways her team has studied, the gaps in available data exceed 1,300 miles.
“There’s no one-stop app to find chargers, which means it can be hard to find out whether a charger is working,” she said. “Who’s responsible? Who do you tell when it’s broken? So they don’t get fixed.”
Potential policy solutions
Currently, the federal government is not prioritizing increasing EV purchasing, as has been a trend in recent years, she said. It has cut incentive programs, including tax credits and spending programs, to improve availability of real-time charger data for drivers.
According to Buckberg, this investment is crucial to increasing the share of EVs on the road and reaping the environmental benefits. Her research shows that universal real-time data on highway fast chargers would raise new EV sales by 6.4 percentage points in 2030 — or 3.5 million additional EVs on the road in 2030 compared to the status quo. That would grow the overall share of EVs on the road by 15 percent and in turn create a reduction in emissions of about 15 million metric tons, she said.
“Data transparency could cure range anxiety,” she said in her talk. “Imagine that you could go to Google Maps, you could go to Apple Maps, you could go to whatever is the killer new EV app, and you could get reliable information.”
But there is still hope, she said. In partnership with scholars Ari Peskoe, Carrie Jenks, and Eliza Martin at Harvard Law School, Buckberg’s team has developed example legislation for state governments that would establish common standards for EV-charging providers to increase the reliability of their data.
“No expensive federal investment or tax credits,” she said. “It’s a really cheap option at a time where we’ve got pullback of federal incentives that would raise the number of registered EVs.”
And, Buckberg said, having states take the lead would reduce resistance for charging providers that have not made sharing data a priority.
“From a state perspective, this could be justified because it yields benefits at very low cost,” she said.
‘Dry January’ helped drive drinking rates to 96-year lowHealth experts say rise of sober-curious movement, shifts in tech, meds likely made difference in wake of pandemic excess
‘Dry January’ helped drive drinking rates to 96-year low
Alvin Powell
Harvard Staff Writer
9 min read
Health experts say rise of sober-curious movement, shifts in tech, meds likely made difference in wake of pandemic excess
Are shifts in drinking culture, wearable technology, and drug research combining to help cut alcohol consumption to levels not seen since the 1930s?
Harvard health experts think they might be.
A recent survey showed that a record low of 54 percent of U.S. adults say they drink, the lowest seen since the Gallup Poll’s initial 1939 look at the nation’s imbibing habits. The reading is the latest in a multiyear trend, which has seen a decline from 67 percent in 2022 to 62 percent in 2023, 58 percent in 2024, to today’s 54 percent.
The poll also suggests that those who do drink are drinking less, with a record low of 24 percent reporting having had an alcoholic beverage in the last 24 hours.
“The messages are landing,” said Marisa Silveri, an associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and director of McLean Hospital’s Neurodevelopmental Laboratory on Addictions and Mental Health. “We’re seeing measurable shifts in drinking behavior and awareness that reflect decades of neuroscience and public health research finally translating into real-world impact.”
During the pandemic, the outlook was less positive. A significant spike in drinking caused alarm among public health officials and researchers, who saw a reversal of hard-won gains and predicted long-term harms and a spike in alcohol-related deaths — due to cancer, liver failure, and other alcohol-related ills — in the years ahead.
Silveri gives the so-called sober-curious movement a lot of credit for ushering in change. The message of re-evaluating one’s relationship with alcohol gained steam after the pandemic, spread widely through social media, and seemed to touch a collective nerve. Breaks from drinking in “Dry January” — New Year’s resolution season — or autumn’s “Sober October” went mainstream.
Silveri, like many Americans, became more aware of how drinking habits changed during the pandemic. Extending a Dry January into 500 days, she saw firsthand the sleep and mood improvements that mirror what neuroscience has long demonstrated about alcohol’s impact on brain health.
The increasing sophistication and popularity of wearable technology also may have played a part, Silveri said. Fitness trackers not only record a person’s steps during the day but also highlight the physiological effects of a night’s drinking, chronicling elevated heart rate, blood pressure, and sleep disruptions — changes that can result in mood, cognitive, and mental health impacts.
Recent scientific findings that no amount of alcohol is healthy arrived amid the shifting social environment on drinking, potentially lending those cautions greater resonance, Silveri said.
Those results also called into question the once-accepted wisdom that light to moderate drinking isn’t harmful and that some drinking — a glass of red wine per day — may actually be healthful.
“Alcohol challenges our physiology, there’s no disputing that,” Silveri said. “And there’s not really any evidence that it changes physiology in a beneficial way.”
Marisa Silveri (left), Joji Suzuki, Guongyi Szabo, and Jagpreet Chhatwal.
That stance echoes the January warning by the U.S. surgeon general that alcohol is the nation’s third-leading preventable cause of cancer, after smoking and obesity.
Drinking, the advisory said, has a causal link to seven different cancers: breast, colorectal, esophagus, liver, mouth, throat, and voice box. Drinking more increases risk, the advisory says, though for three cancers — breast, mouth, and throat — the risk rises with as little as one drink per day.
“The message that’s finally resonating is that is if you have an alcohol use disorder or have problematic alcohol use, any reduction in use is an improvement. It’s not all or nothing,” Silveri said. “For some, abstinence remains essential, but for many people who drink at hazardous levels, even modest reductions can yield measurable benefits — better sleep, improved mood, sharper cognition. These small physiological and psychological gains reinforce each other, supporting longer-term change.”
While the negative health effects of alcohol have gained public prominence recently, some researchers caution against discarding all past evidence of beneficial effects.
There’s no argument that heavy drinking is harmful, but the question — and the evidence — concerning low and moderate drinking is more complex and requires more high quality studies, they say. Increased risk for some cancers may be counterbalanced by lower risk of others, for example.
Moderate drinking seems to decrease the risk of cardiovascular disease versus nondrinkers. Drinking patterns are also important, with one large study showing that moderate drinking with meals appeared to decrease mortality, while consuming the same weekly amount outside of meals and on fewer occasions increases mortality.
Joji Suzuki, associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and director of Brigham and Women’s Hospital’s Division of Addiction Psychiatry, said the sober-curious movement has been reinforced by the development of appealing non-alcoholic alternatives, such as mocktails and a new generation of nonalcoholic beer and wine, that reduce stigma and make bars, parties, and nightclubs more welcoming.
While the increased interest in sobriety is important, Suzuki said many people will continue to drink, so it’s also important not to lose the message of moderation.
“If you’re not drinking, don’t start drinking because you think you’re going to get a benefit,” Suzuki said. “But we know that people are going to drink, so keep it moderate. Moderation is a very important message.”
“Moderation is a very important message.”
Joji Suzuki
Another shift in recent years, Suzuki said, has been the startling effectiveness of the latest generation of anti-obesity medications in helping curb drinking.
These Ozempic successors are GLP-1 inhibitors and have been widely prescribed in just a few years. They’ve proven remarkably effective at removing the desire to overeat and have allowed people to drop significant weight.
But they also reduce the thirst for alcohol, Suzuki said, to the extent that trials are being considered to test GLP-1 medication for treatment of alcohol use disorder.
If successful, the drugs would represent a powerful new optionto the current major treatment alternatives, like naltrexone, which have not proven very effective.
“People who are not even trying to cut back on drinking are saying, ‘After starting those medications, I notice that I’m not drinking much — or at all,’” Suzuki said. “There are a number of companies that are now specifically targeting alcohol use disorder with GLP-1s, with the aim of making them an FDA-approved treatment.”
Gyongyi Szabo, expert on liver inflammation, HMS professor of medicine, and chief academic officer at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, sees a generational shift in the data, and in her own home.
The recent Gallup poll found that young adult drinking rates have been falling for a decade and since 2023 dropped from 59 percent to 50 percent.
Szabo’s 30-year-old son recently said he’d become a vegetarian, something she attributes to a greater appreciation among the current generation of young adults of the health and social consequences of choices made in eating and drinking.
“There is a generational shift that may be beneficial,” Szabo said.
Szabo said the excess consumption during the pandemic’s difficult months may have caused “an awakening” among those light or moderate drinkers who became worried about what was happening. The downstream effects of that awakening — and the reaction that caused — may still be becoming apparent.
“The increased alcohol use during the lockdown was really bad for everyone,” Szabo said. “But maybe the news actually travels, and people change their behavior. If this is true, it is very, very good. It’s going to have a multiplier effect from the standpoint of liver disease, because, in combination with alcohol, other conditions like medical obesity and Type 2 diabetes have a synergistic effect on the liver.”
During the pandemic, Silveri said, there were concerns that parents stuck at home might allow or even encourage teenagers to drink with them, reasoning that it was safer for them to do so in a controlled environment.
But the pandemic may have had a beneficial effect as well.
School shutdowns disrupted the high school social scene that commonly involves illicit drinking, and research has shown that the later youth begin drinking, the lower the chances that they’ll become problem drinkers down the road.
Even a year or two delay in the age of initiation of youth drinking can reduce physiological impacts on the adolescent brain, with potentially positive ripple effects.
“For anyone under the age of 21 there are not only no benefits to drinking, but clear harms,” Silveri said. “Alcohol interferes with brain development, amplifies risk-taking and emotional reactivity, and raises vulnerability to addiction. Delaying the onset of first use remains one of the most effective ways to protect against later addiction. I stand by that strongly because it is supported by some of our best epidemiological data.”
Despite the positive trends, experts said alcohol’s negative societal impacts are far from finished.
Jagpreet Chhatwal, associate professor of radiology at Harvard Medical School and director of Massachusetts General Hospital’s Institute for Technology Assessment, said the recent polling provided a broad view but didn’t focus on problem drinking, which doesn’t appear to have subsided.
Liver failure, Chhatwal said, is caused by years of heavy drinking, and any change in those drinking habits won’t be reflected in clinic waiting rooms for some time.
“Binge drinking, high-risk drinking, those things were not covered in the survey, and it will be important that we see those trends also coming down,” said Chhatwal, who leads health policy research in several areas, including alcohol use disorder, liver cancer, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. “It’s too soon to say that this small drop in consumption will have an impact because it takes years to see that trend in liver disease.”
There are other pockets of concern as well, Suzuki said.
People with alcohol-related issues are over-represented in the nation’s emergency rooms, while high school drinking remains an issue. Women continue to narrow the gap with men when it comes to problem drinking, with the result that alcoholic liver disease is increasing among women.
“It’s not all good news,” Suzuki said. “There are some troubling trends that are emerging, but overall I think it’s great that there’s a greater interest in sobriety and recognition that heavy drinking can be harmful.”
Time for mandatory retirement ages for lawmakers, judges, presidents?Americans seem to mostly say yes; legal, medical scholars point to complexities of setting limits
Time for mandatory retirement ages for lawmakers, judges, presidents?
Francis Shen, Benjamin Silverman (on screen), and Nancy Gertner.
Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer
Liz Mineo
Harvard Staff Writer
5 min read
Americans seem to mostly say yes; legal, medical scholars point to complexities of setting limits
Many professions come with mandatory retirement ages but not so for federal judges and lawmakers, with many remaining on the job well into their 70s and 80s.
That could be ripe for a change as concerns increase over cognitive decline among aging leaders and jurists, said experts during a Wednesday panel titled “How Old is Too Old to Govern?”
“There may well be, particularly now, a movement to have age limits or term limits for judges,” said retired federal judge Nancy Gertner, senior lecturer on Law at Harvard Law School, at the event sponsored by the Petrie-Flom Center. “They exist everywhere else in the world and in the majority of states. The Supreme Court’s lack of either an age limit or a term limit is really unusual.”
Questions about the graying of the nation’s leaders became a major campaign issue in recent elections, most notably in the races for the nation’s commander in chief. Former president Joe Biden was 82 at the end of his presidency, and Donald Trump, at 78, became the oldest person to be inaugurated as president for his second term.
The issue is widespread.
Both Republicans in the Senate and Democrats in the House were led until recently by octogenarians; Republican Senator Mitch O’Connell announced his retirement on his 83rd birthday, and Democratic Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi will be 86 at the end of her term in 2027. The average age of a member of Congress is about 59.
On the Supreme Court, Justices Clarence Thomas (77) and Samuel Alito (75) are the most senior on the bench, followed by Sonia Sotomayor (71) and Chief Justice John Roberts (70).
According to the Federal Judicial Center, in 2024, the average age of U.S. federal judges was 67.68 years.
Most Americans support age limits for both politicians and Supreme Court justices, according to a report from the Pew Research Center, but that would require a constitutional amendment.
The U.S. Constitution sets 35 as the minimum age for president, 30 for senators, and 25 for representatives, but it does not set a maximum age limit. The document specifies neither minimum nor maximum age for Supreme Court justices.
During his remarks, Francis X. Shen, professor of law at the University of Minnesota, and member of Harvard Medical School Center for Bioethics, pointed to a New York Times article that reported that more than a fifth of members of Congress are 70 years old and older.
“There are more people in Congress who are older than ever before,” said Shen, who moderated the event.
In the case of aging judges, some states have tackled the issue already. Thirty-two of 50 impose a mandatory retirement age, according to an article by the National Center for State Courts.
“The upside of that is that it’s administratively very easy. All you need is a birth certificate and a calculator,” Shen said. “The second upside is you reduce, though not entirely, some concerns about cognitive decline in older ages.”
Worldwide, most countries have either a compulsory retirement age for justices in their highest court — which ranges from 60 to 75 years — or term limits.
To address the issue of aging politicians, Shen discussed the possibility of a mandatory disclosure of cognitive assessments, similar to financial disclosures, to provide voters with additional information.
Benjamin C. Silverman, assistant professor of psychiatry and member of the Center for Bioethics at Harvard Medical School, highlighted the difficulties in assessing cognitive impairment, including the vast individual variation in cognitive decline, the variability in cognitive reserve among individuals, and the lack of a baseline neurocognitive functioning assessment.
“The biggest challenge to assessing cognitive impairment is lacking a baseline assessment,” said Silverman. “As we get older, if we display some sort of cognitive challenges, someone might say, ‘Let’s do some neuropsychological testing,’ but without the ability to compare that to something, without being able to see a trajectory, it’s really hard to know what to do with it.”
Gertner retired at 65 in 2011 to pursue other career options, including teaching and writing. She says imposing a retirement age on judges would ultimately be more effective, although she echoed the notion of the complications in setting one.
Individualized cognitive assessments might pose risks in implementation due to potential bias, but also because there isn’t agreement on how to assess cognitive impairment in judges, she said.
“If we don’t have an agreement on what comprises cognitive decline, I’m not sure that I feel comfortable about a cognitive test,” said Gertner. “What is the marker of individualized decline in our incredibly divided world, where judges are under attack?”
Gertner believes that mandatory retirement age for judges, including Supreme Court justices, would help avoid public debates about cognitive decline and also help the court regain some public support, which has dropped to “near historic lows,” according to a recent Pew report.
“I stand for retirement age, particularly for the Supreme Court justices,” said Gertner. “There is another generation coming down the pipe … and the retirement age should address the issue of cognition, but also the issue of democratic legitimacy.”
Harsh past might bare its teethEarly adversity leads to higher aggression and fearfulness in adult canines, study says
Early adversity leads to higher aggression, fearfulness in adult canines, study says
Mistreating a dog may come back to bite you.
Scientists have long known that childhood abuse, neglect, and trauma can have lifelong consequences in humans. Now, a study by Harvard scientists links early adversity to similar effects in our oldest domesticated species.
In a study of nearly 4,500 dogs published in Scientific Reports, researchers found that adverse experiences in the first six months of puppyhood were strongly associated with elevated aggression and fearfulness in adult dogs.
“In the general population of dogs, you see a significant impact of life experience on behavior,” said Julia Espinosa, lead author of the new study and a research associate in the Department of Human Evolutionary Biology (HEB). “What we found that was really surprising is that this impact varies by the breed of the dog, so that suggests there’s an important heritable component to behavior and individual susceptibility to stress.”
“This lines up with what we’ve seen in humans and in other animals — there’s this critical period of development when the nervous system is more sensitive,” said study co-author Erin Hecht.
Harvard file photo
Numerous studies have established that early adversity has lifelong effects on humans as well as other animals, including mice. But no comprehensive studies had been performed on dogs until now. The research was conducted in the lab of Erin Hecht, an assistant professor in Human Evolutionary Biology and a prominent researcher of canine biology, evolution, and domestication.
Espinosa collected data on 4,497 dogs by having their owners fill out a survey that covered whether the animals had been subjected to harsh punishments such as beatings, having their mouths held shut, or being pinned down by humans seeking to assert dominance (the so-called “alpha roll”). The survey also asked whether the dogs had gone through traumatic events such as living on the streets, being attacked by other dogs, or getting hit by cars.
“We know that the nervous system is especially plastic early in life,” said Hecht. “In this study, we found that in dogs, traumatic experiences during the first six months had the biggest impact on their fear and aggression behavior later in life.
“This lines up with what we’ve seen in humans and in other animals — there’s this critical period of development when the nervous system is more sensitive and impacts during that time can have bigger effects.”
As dog owners can attest, different breeds exhibit stark differences in behavior and temperament. Researchers uncovered wide variability in baseline levels of fear and aggression among different breeds. For example, breeds that specialized in guarding livestock or bringing down big game were more prone to aggression.
The impacts were most dramatic in breeds such as American Eskimo Dogs, American Leopard Hounds, and Siberian Huskies. Labradors showed relatively little effects.
Within each breed, researchers reported that puppyhood trauma had measurable effects: Animals with histories of adversity displayed greater fear and aggression than other members of the same breeds. These experiences were at least as influential as other factors such as sex and whether the animal had been neutered.
The impacts were most dramatic in breeds such as American Eskimo Dogs, American Leopard Hounds, and Siberian Huskies. On other hand, Labradors showed relatively little effects.
More than half the dogs in the survey came from single breeds. About 48 percent were mutts from mixed or unknown ancestry.
About one-third of the animals were reported to have suffered some form of adversity. But Hecht cautioned that those numbers were probably unusually high in this study population.
“We specifically recruited dogs that had trauma histories,” she said. “So I don’t think this necessarily means that a third of the dogs out there in the world have been neglected or abused.”
The researchers heard heartbreaking stories. One Golden Retriever puppy was fed only a few tablespoons of food every day and by the time he was rescued at age 6 months he weighed only 20 pounds. Although his body recovered, he remained unusually fearful.
The lesson: Our best friends carry early trauma for the rest of their lives.
“Maybe this makes them a little bit more like us than we realized,” said Hecht.
Brief bursts of wisdomAphorism lover and historian James Geary reflects on how ancient literary art form fits into age of social media
Aphorism lover and historian James Geary reflects on how ancient literary art form fits into age of social media
Liz Mineo
Harvard Staff Writer
5 min read
James Geary.
Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
Since James Geary, adjunct lecturer in public policy at Harvard Kennedy School, encountered his first aphorism at age 8, his love for them has only grown. So much so that in 2005, he published a bestselling book, “The World in a Phrase: A Brief History of the Aphorism.” The book’s second edition comes out this month.
In an interview, which has been edited for clarity and length, Geary spoke to the Gazette about the appeal of those short, philosophical phrases, how they differ from slogans or tweets, and why memes can be the new aphorisms.
What’s the appeal of aphorisms?
Aphorisms are the oldest written art form on the planet, but they’re also the most contemporary. With the rise of social media and short-form communication, in many ways the aphorism has found its perfect technological platform. So much of social media today is just toxic — hot takes, rage posts, and all that kind of stuff — but aphorisms from their beginning, 5,000 years ago in China and Egypt, were mostly philosophical thoughts. They’re often witty and are a very sophisticated form of literature that, unlike so much social media today, is not intended to confirm the opinions you already have, but to challenge and provoke you to think further and deeper.
How do aphorisms differ from proverbs, slogans, or tweets?
A key component of an aphorism is that it has to be philosophical; it has to make you think. And I don’t mean that it has to be esoteric or impenetrable, but about the ultimate questions in life. Aphorisms help us to examine our own beliefs, practices, and our own biases. They’re kind of a philosophy for daily life. Unlike political or commercial slogans or tweets, aphorisms provide answers to that old philosophical question of how to live a good life.
Aphorisms have to be super accessible; you can understand them in a second. And they often feature a twist that upends expectations. Mae West, a famous American actress from the 1940s, said, “It’s not the men in my life that count; it’s the life in my men.” Or JFK’s “Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country.” Or French writer Nicolas Chamfort’s “Society is composed of two great classes: those who have more appetite than dinners, and those who have more dinners than appetite.” Their mode of delivery is brief, but the impact of a really good aphorism is long-lasting; they are in your head for a lifetime. I first encountered the aphorism “The only difference between a rut and a grave is the depth” when I was 8 years old, and it has never left my mind.
“Aphorisms have to be super accessible; you can understand them in a second. And they often feature a twist that upends expectations.”
You say in your book that memes are the new form of aphorism. How so?
Since memes appeared on the scene, I realized that aphorisms don’t have to involve language.
Aphorisms can work with visual or textual signs, or it can be a combination. Clet Abraham, for example, uses no words in his visual aphorisms; he takes street signs and twists them to bring out a philosophical meaning. Shilpa Gupta uses text, but she puts the text into the environment so it feels like you’re walking past an aphorism. Xu Bing, the Chinese artist, uses language but kind of distorts it, playing with the ways in which we perceive images and the way we understand language.
Memes are the next step in the evolution of the aphorism. But I wouldn’t say every meme is an aphorism, just like every tweet is not an aphorism. Even if it’s a meme or a visual textual combination, it should still have a twist, it should still be philosophical. The vast majority of memes or tweets are not aphorisms, but the aphorism is adapting to a newly accessible form of communication, which is visual, not only textual.
What’s the common thread among aphorists across eras? What are they preoccupied with?
Politics is a very common thread in many aphorisms from ancient times until today. An ancient Egyptian ruler passed his wisdom to his child who was going to succeed him by saying, “To rule is to know how to be ruled.” And then you have Stanisław Jerzy Lec, a Polish dissident who lived under Soviet rule, who wrote, “Politics: A Trojan horse race.” Daily life is a big theme along with love, friendship, relationships, and money. Mark Twain said, “The lack of money is the root of all evil.”
Austrian writer Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach said, “An intelligent woman has millions of born enemies … all the stupid men.” Polish writer Urszula Zybura said, “If the future had known what lay ahead, it would have never come,” which sums up the political history of Central Europe under Soviet rule. American thinkers such as Twain, Benjamin Franklin, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Henry David Thoreau are concerned with individualism. Thoreau said, “Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away.”
Do you have any aphorisms of your own?
Yes, I do. Usually, they come out of the blue, or when I’m writing something else, and an aphorism pops up in my mind. Here are a couple: “Even your disguise reveals you.” “If your expectations are low, you are certain to meet them.” This one came out of my classes at the Kennedy School: “Good advice for writing is good advice for living.”
Flew home as Will Flintoft, returned as Rhodes ScholarApplied math concentrator to study computer science, theology with eye toward AI
Flew home as Will Flintoft, returned as Rhodes Scholar
Applied math concentrator to study computer science, theology with eye toward AI
Matt Goisman
Harvard Correspondent
4 min read
Will Flintoft flew home to Australia for a few days last month and returned to campus as a Rhodes Scholar.
The senior mathematics and philosophy double-concentrator will spend the next two years at the University of Oxford, where he plans to pursue advanced degrees in two fields: mathematics and foundations of computer science, and philosophical theology.
“Part of the trajectory I see for myself is lending a perspective which is both technically informed, but also deeply plugged into ethics,” said Flintoft, who is also pursuing a concurrent master’s degree in applied math at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS). “We seem to be at this really catalytic moment in the world with regards to large language models and machine learning more generally. There’s a lot of work to be done making sure that this kind of technology is being developed in a way that’s smart and also sensitive to the ways in which it can go wrong and where there can be pitfalls.”
Flintoft applied to the Rhodes Scholarship last August and was named a finalist for the one scholarship allocated to the Australian state of Victoria. He needed to complete two panel interviews — the first was virtual, but the second required a flight home.
“Both rounds of interviews were with the full selection panel, which is composed of former Rhodes scholars who have gone on to do really fascinating, cool things, as well as really important figures in the Australian community,” he said.
Flintoft found out that night that he’d been selected. That meant he got to celebrate with his family.
“It was a really special experience, but very brief, because I had to hop back on a plane to get back to Boston literally a couple of hours later,” he said. “It was a very rushed experience amid the delirium of jet lag. A lot of time zone changes, but it was a really wonderful experience.”
While most Rhodes Scholars receive their first graduate degrees at Oxford, Flintoft will arrive with one already completed. Applied math has provided him with tools to both deepen and better deploy his undergraduate education into the intersection of philosophy and technology.
“For those that want to push that little extra mile and really sink our teeth into truly difficult grad classes, which are often literally at the forefront of research, that kind of experience is very special,” he said. “Applied math specifically is a wonderfully versatile degree. It has intersections in biology, economics, physics, computer science, a whole host of different disciplines.”
At Oxford, Flintoft is especially interested in the philosophical and societal implications of artificial intelligence and fundamental questions such as what it means to be human when AI can improve on or replace so much of human behavior.
“There are going to be a whole host of really good benefits as a result of AI being deployed en masse in a society,” Flintoft said. “Productivity increases, and there’ll be benefits to people’s lives and livelihoods because there’ll be a whole bunch of quite complex services that will be a lot cheaper. But the important thing is that the transformation is done right, because AI will catalyze and accelerate. It’s important that that acceleration happens in the right direction.”
Flintoft’s time at Harvard reflects broad interdisciplinary interests. His extracurricular activities include being managing editor of the Harvard Review of Philosophy and editorial chair of the Harvard Undergraduate Law Review.
He is also a researcher in the Soft Math Lab of L. Mahadevan, Lola England de Valpine Professor of Applied Mathematics, of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, and of Physics at SEAS, where he studies complex behaviors in biology, such as the mathematics behind control of muscular hydrostats such as octopus arms.
Flintoft’s research raises philosophical questions about consciousness and conscious decision-making — questions Flintoft might very well get to answer over the next two years.
“I’ll get the chance to hone my interests a little bit more in these two areas that are really important to me,” he said. “Additionally, the Rhodes Scholarship is designed to immerse scholars in a community of other scholars who are also all public service-oriented and really want to maximize the impact that their study can have on the world. I think that connection between what we learn in the classroom and the way that we then go on to bring good into the world is really important.”
What will AI mean for humanity?Scholars from range of disciplines see red flags, possibilities ahead
E. Glen Weyl (second from right), shares his more optimistic view of technology during the panel discussion “How Is Digital Technology Shaping the Human Soul?” Panelists included Moira Weigel (from right), Nataliya Kos’myna, Brandon Vaidyanathan, and moderator Ian Marcus Corbin.
Photos by Veasey Conway/Harvard Staff Photographer
Clea Simon
Harvard Correspondent
6 min read
Scholars from range of disciplines see red flags, possibilities ahead
What does the rise of artificial intelligence mean for humanity? That was the question at the core of “How is digital technology shaping the human soul?,” a panel discussion that drew experts from computer science to comparative literature last week.
The Oct. 1 event was the first from the Public Culture Project, a new initiative based in the office of the dean of arts and humanities. Program Director Ian Marcus Corbin, a philosopher on the neurology faculty of Harvard Medical School, said the project’s goal was putting “humanist and humanist thinking at the center of the big conversations of our age.”
“Are we becoming tech people?” Corbin asked. The answers were varied
“We as humanity are excellent at creating different tools that support our lives,” said Nataliya Kos’myna, a research scientist with the MIT Media Lab. These tools are good at making “our lives longer, but not always making our lives the happiest, the most fulfilling,” she continued, listing examples from the typewriter to the internet.
Generative AI, specifically ChatGPT, is the latest example of a tool that essentially backfires in promoting human happiness, she suggested.
She shared details of a study of 54 students from across Greater Boston whose brain activity was monitored by electroencephalography after being asked to write an essay.
Nataliya Kos’myna (right) with panelist Brandon Vaidyanathan.
One group of students was allowed to use ChatGPT, another permitted access to the internet and Google, while a third group was restricted to their own intelligence and imagination. The topics — such as “Is there true happiness?” — did not require any previous or specialized knowledge.
The results were striking: The ChatGPT group demonstrated “much less brain activity.” In addition, their essays were very similar, focusing primarily on career choices as the determinants of happiness.
The internet group tended to write about giving, while the third group focused more on the question of true happiness.
Questions illuminated the gap. All the participants were asked whether they could quote a line from their own essays, one minute after turning them in.
“Eighty-three percent of the ChatGPT group couldn’t quote anything,” compared to 11 percent from the second and third groups. ChatGPT users “didn’t feel much ownership,” of their work. They “didn’t remember, didn’t feel it was theirs.”
“Your brain needs struggle,” Kos’myna said. “It doesn’t bloom” when a task is too easy. In order to learn and engage, a task “needs to be just hard enough for you to work for this knowledge.”
E. Glen Weyl, research lead with Microsoft Research Special Projects, had a more optimistic view of technology. “Just seeing the problems disempowers us,” he said, urging instead for scientists to “redesign systems.”
He noted that much of the current focus on technology is on its commercial aspect. “Well, the only way they can make money is by selling advertising,” he said, paraphrasing prevailing wisdom before countering it. “I’m not sure that’s the only way this can be structured.”
“Underlying what we might call scientific intelligence there is a deeper, spiritual intelligence — why things matter.”
Brandon Vaidyanathan
Citing works such as Steven Pinker’s new book, “When Everyone Knows That Everyone Knows,” Weyl talked about the idea of community — and how social media is more focused on groups than on individuals.
“If we thought about engineering a feed about these notions, you might be made aware of things in your feed that come from different members of your community. You would have a sense that everyone is hearing that at the same time.”
This would lead to a “theory of mind” of those other people, he explained, opening our sense of shared experiences, like that shared by attendees at a concert.
To illustrate how that could work for social media, he brought up Super Bowl ads. These, said Weyl, “are all about creating meaning.” Rather than sell individual drinks or computers, for example, we are told “Coke is for sharing. Apple is for rebels.”
“Creating a common understanding of something leads us to expect others to share the understanding of that thing,” he said.
To reconfigure tech in this direction, he acknowledged, “requires taking our values seriously enough to let them shape” social media. It is, however, a promising option.
Moira Weigel, an assistant professor in comparative literature at Harvard, took the conversation back before going forward, pointing out that many of the questions discussed have captivated humans since the 19th century.
Weigel, who is also a faculty associate at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society, centered her comments around five questions, which are also at the core of her introductory class, “Literature and/as AI: Humanity, Technology, and Creativity.”
“What is the purpose of work?” she asked, amending her query to add whether a “good” society should try to automate all work. “What does it mean to have, or find, your voice? Do our technologies extend our agency — or do they escape our control and control us? Can we have relationships with things that we or other human beings have created? What does it mean to say that some activity is merely technical, a craft or a skill, and when is it poesis” or art?
Looking at the influence of large language models in education, she said, “I think and hope LLMs are creating an interesting occasion to rethink what is instrumental. They scramble our perception of what education is essential,” she said. LLMs “allow us to ask how different we are from machines — and to claim the space to ask those questions.”
Brandon Vaidyanathan, a professor of sociology at Catholic University of America, also saw possibility.
Vaidyanathan, the panel’s first speaker, began by noting the difference between science and technology, citing the philosopher Martin Heidegger’s concept of “enframing” has tech viewing everything as “product.”
Vaidyanathan noted that his experience suggests scientists take a different view.
“Underlying what we might call scientific intelligence there is a deeper, spiritual intelligence — why things matter,” he said.
Instead of the “domination, extraction, and fragmentation” most see driving tech (and especially AI), he noted that scientists tend toward “the three principles of spiritual intelligence: reverence, receptivity, and reconnection.” More than 80 percent of them “encounter a deep sense of respect for what they’re studying,” he said.
Describing a researcher studying the injection needle of the salmonella bacteria with a “deep sense of reverence,” he noted, “You’d have thought this was the stupa of a Hindu temple.
“Tech and science can open us up to these kind of spiritual experiences,” Vaidyanathan continued.
“Can we imagine the development of technology that could cultivate a sense of reverence rather than domination?” To do that, he concluded, might require a “disconnect on a regular basis.”
Tai Tsun Wu, 90Memorial Minute — Faculty of Arts and Sciences
At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on Oct. 7, 2025, the following tribute to the life and service of the late Tai Tsun Wu was spread upon the permanent records of the Faculty.
Professor Tai Tsun Wu was a formidable member of both the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and the Department of Physics at Harvard. At the age of 22, his ground-breaking research on antenna theory under the direction of Professor Ronold W. P. King established him as one of the leading experts in this important field. The remarkable breadth of Wu’s research interests over the course of his career was underpinned by his exceptional mathematical abilities. Although he shifted the main thrust of this research to fundamental problems in physics, he continued for years to be active in solving basic electricity and magnetism problems that arise in antenna theory.
During Wu’s subsequent productive career, he pursued a long collaboration with Hung Cheng, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Their extraordinary study of the high-energy behavior in quantum field theory illuminated properties of renormalization theory and resulted in the prediction of rising total cross-section of hadron scattering. Wu’s work on statistical mechanics models with Barry McCoy, Craig Tracy, and others led to different insights, including finding a closed-form solution for correlation functions of the scaling limit of the Ising model, ostensibly an exact quantum field theory. In 1975 Wu collaborated with C.N. Yang to reformulate the theory of monopoles, leading to what is now referred to as the “Wu-Yang dictionary.” Professor Wu advised many graduate students and had numerous collaborators, including John Myers.
Wu’s research led to his recognition in many ways. Among other achievements, he received the Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Prize. He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and to the Academia Sinica. Wu taught courses in applied mathematics and in physics in the Department of Physics and in SEAS. He was known to students and colleagues as an accessible expert on mathematical methods. Wu shunned the limelight and the pursuit of recognition; rather, he constantly focused on his research. For this reason, despite the fact that he authored over 400 publications, including six books, his work is not as widely known as it should be.
Wu was born on Dec. 1, 1933, in Shanghai, China. He came to the United States to study as an undergraduate at the University of Minnesota, where, in 1953, he won the William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition. This national competition for undergraduates has a Harvard connection: it was established by Elizabeth Lowell Putnam in honor of her husband and it offers a Harvard graduate school scholarship to one of the top winners each year. Wu applied to Harvard as the first Putnam Fellow from the University of Minnesota. A story that is still told is that members of the Department of Mathematics had naturally assumed that young Wu would be joining them, but he had applied to study applied physics. His doctoral thesis led to his election to the Society of Fellows at the age of 22 and to his appointment in the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences at age 25, where he remained until 2021, when he became an emeritus professor.
Wu was fond of several local Chinese restaurants, where many friends were his guests for lunch or dinner. One of these guests recalled being feasted by Wu with a dinner that included chicken feet, an unusual experience. Wu expressed his generosity in many other ways. One new faculty member arrived at Harvard without a car just as Wu was about to leave for a sabbatical. Wu insisted that his young colleague drive his Dodge Dart until he returned.
While at Harvard, Wu became acquainted with Sau Lan Yu, a graduate student in experimental physics. They married on June 18, 1967, in the Harvard Memorial Church. Sau Lan went on to become distinguished for her role in the discovery of the J/𝜓 particle with Samuel Ting at Brookhaven National Laboratory, as well as for leading many experiments with the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN). The Wu family spent much time both in Cambridge and Europe. In 2022 they sold their Cambridge house and moved to Palo Alto, California, where Wu died in the Stanford University hospital on July 19, 2024.
Respectfully submitted,
Hung Cheng (MIT) Sheldon Glashow John Hutchinson Arthur Jaffe, Chair
Portions of this Minute were previously published: Arthur Jaffe, “Tai Tsun Wu (1933-2024),” Department of Physics’ website, July 23, 2024, https://www.physics.harvard.edu/news/tai-tsun-wu-1933-2024 [accessed Aug. 11, 2025].
Richard Goody, 102Memorial Minute — Faculty of Arts and Sciences
At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on Oct. 7, 2025, the following tribute to the life and service of the late Richard Goody was spread upon the permanent records of the Faculty.
With a remarkable life spanning more than a century, 1921 to 2023, and a scientific career embracing seven decades, Richard Goody successfully bridged experimental observations with theory that fostered unprecedented advances in our understanding of the Earth’s troposphere-stratosphere coupling, of the structure and function of the atmospheres of Venus and Mars, and of the intricacies of the quantum mechanics of molecular spectra. His high-resolution spectral analysis of molecules and nonequilibrium thermodynamics brought remarkable insight to what proved to be the context for climate change. Moreover, Goody possessed an innate sense for leading the development of strategic approaches at Harvard, which advanced the University’s intellectual structure and led to the modern union represented first by the Center for Earth and Planetary Physics (CEPP), the predecessor of the current Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences and the area of Environmental Science and Engineering.
Remarkably, a number of Goody’s intellectual dimensions were present in his first experimental endeavor immediately following the Second World War. As a graduate student at the University of Cambridge, Goody designed and built an infrared spectrometer to obtain measurements of water vapor in the Earth’s stratosphere. The spectrometer operated from a wooden bomber, the Mosquito, capable of altitudes approaching 40,000 ft. and powered by two 3,000 hp engines. Despite the extreme levels of noise and vibration, the aerodynamic instability of the aircraft, and the need to acquire a solar image on the center of the spectrometer’s entrance slit, his successful infrared spectrum of the Sun yielded a determination of the water vapor concentration in the stratosphere. This profound accomplishment set a benchmark for the unprecedented observations and theoretical foundations for the quantitative interpretation of the interactions of photons with molecular structures, which defined his scientific career.
Goody moved from the U.K. to Harvard in 1958, when studies of the Earth and of Space systems were rapidly expanding as the U.S. and the Soviet Union increasingly engaged in the Cold War. The modern era of leadership in Earth and Planetary Physics was born when he founded the Harvard CEPP, providing unprecedented support for these studies and initiating strategic approaches that resulted in increasingly sophisticated observations and modeling of the planets and of the Earth’s atmospheric, oceanic, and biological systems. Goody brought Michael McElroy to Harvard to join the CEPP in 1970, advancing both planetary studies and aeronomy (the study of the Earth’s atmosphere and of its union with the solar system and interstellar processes). McElroy, it would turn out, profoundly broadened and deepened the intellectual research structure at Harvard, as well as the architecture of the educational design that has carried forward to the present. McElroy, Steven Wofsy, and Yuk Yung were central to the introduction of halogen species into studies of catalytic loss of stratospheric ozone, but the intellectual union of Goody, McElroy, Yung, and Wofsy extended across multiple domains of atmospheric radiation, the photochemical structures of planetary atmospheres, and perturbations to the Earth’s atmosphere by human effluents.
In parallel with Goody’s vision of embracing the rapidly expanding manifold of intellectual pursuits was a consistent focus on advancing the fundamental understanding of atmospheric radiation, by virtue of multiple publications and the release of two classic textbooks: (1) “Principles of Atmospheric Physics and Chemistry” and (2) “Atmospheric Radiation: Theoretical Basis,” co-authored with Yung, who became a Professor of Planetary Sciences at the California Institute of Technology. These textbooks are central to undergraduate and graduate curricula of universities internationally. When James Anderson was drawn to Harvard by Goody, McElroy, and Dudley Herschbach (in the [then] Department of Chemistry), the CEPP began to experiment with determining the concentrations of the major free radicals involved in stratospheric ozone loss, engaging a new class of in situ observations from stratospheric balloon and aircraft platforms.
The innovation and intellectual agility that the CEPP brought to Earth system studies broadened with time under the leadership of McElroy, leading to the initiation of the new Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences from the Department of Geology, as well as the Harvard University Center for the Environment and the multidisciplinary program Environmental Sciences and Public Policy. Thanks to the vision of scientists like Goody and McElroy, who recognized that a multitude of intellectual disciplines was required to address the field of Earth and planetary sciences, there are now over 30 faculty teaching and researching in this area at Harvard.
Remarkably, Goody’s “retirement” in 1991, at age 70, marked the beginning of a major new phase in his scientific career. After becoming Professor Emeritus at Harvard, he continued his work, which started in 1977, as the Distinguished Visiting Scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California — a highly productive partnership that lasted for over three decades. Goody maintained very active involvement with scientific developments at Harvard. He released his classic textbook “Principles of Atmospheric Physics and Chemistry” in 1995, which, with its emphasis on irreversibility, entropy, and the Carnot cycle, served to establish the critical role of thermodynamics to a new generation as the serious consequences of climate change were rapidly intensifying.
In yet another dimension during this “retirement” period, Goody led a collaboration with Anderson, Gerald North (Texas A&M University), and Kuo-Nan Liou (University of California, Los Angeles), envisioning a new climate observing system by engaging the absolute calibration of a high-resolution infrared spectrometer that could establish subtle (and not-so-subtle) changes in the radiation emitted from the Earth to Space with an accuracy of 50 mK from orbit. The strategy also engaged GPS radio occultation. This effort led to the creation of the Climate Absolute Radiance and Refractivity Observatory (CLARREO) mission.
Respectfully submitted,
Michael McElroy Steven Wofsy Yuk L. Yung (California Institute of Technology) James Anderson, Chair
Cancer is rising among younger people — why?In podcast, experts outline potential factors driving trend and how to reduce risk
‘Harvard Thinking’: Cancer is rising among younger people — why?
Illustrations by Liz Zonarich/Harvard Staff
Samantha Laine Perfas
Harvard Staff Writer
long read
In podcast, experts outline potential factors driving trend and how to reduce risk
Cancer rates in recent decades have been declining. Yet from 2010 to 2019, the incidence of 14 cancer types among people under the age of 50 increased.
“Somebody who is born in 1990 now has quadruple the risk of developing rectal cancer and over double the risk of developing colon cancer compared to a similarly aged person who was born in 1950,” said Kimmie Ng, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and the founding director of the Young-Onset Colorectal Cancer Center at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.
This is a global trend, according to Timothy Rebbeck, the Vincent L. Gregory Jr. Professor of Cancer Prevention at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. It’s happening in both men and women, leading researchers to believe that the factors causing the increases must be widespread.
“The last time we saw this kind of phenomenon on a global scale and with such changes was lung cancer in the mid-20th century,” Rebbeck said. “But we figured that out pretty quickly; that was cigarette smoking.”
To identify what’s driving the rise in early-onset cancer rates, researchers are looking at the role of lifestyle, environmental changes, and potential genetic variations — a recent study even turns to the microbiome. Tomotaka Ugai, a cancer epidemiologist at the Chan School, said that pursuing a healthy lifestyle still goes a long way in reducing not just the risk of cancer but a variety of health issues.
“[Researchers] can speak up more, but also we can collaborate with industries or policymakers to increase awareness of early-onset cancers,” Ugai said.
In this episode of “Harvard Thinking,” host Samantha Laine Perfas talks with Ng, Rebbeck, and Ugai about what’s known about early-onset cancer — and how individuals can mitigate risk.
Kimmie Ng: Somebody who is born in 1990 now has quadruple the risk of developing rectal cancer and over double the risk of developing colon cancer compared to a similarly aged person who was born in 1950.
Samantha Laine Perfas: Contrary to overall cancer trends, there’s been an increase in certain cancer diagnoses in people under 50. From 2010 through 2019, the incidence of 14 cancer types increased among people in this demographic. The big question is, why? Does it have to do with lifestyle choices? Are there environmental factors at play? What can be done to mitigate risk?
Welcome to “Harvard Thinking,” a podcast where the life of the mind meets everyday life. Today I’m joined by:
Timothy Rebbeck: Tim Rebbeck. I’m the Vincent Gregory Professor of Cancer Prevention at the Harvard Chan School and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.
Laine Perfas: He’s a cancer epidemiologist and studies global cancer trends and disparities. Then:
Ng: Kimmie Ng. I’m an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School.
Laine Perfas: She’s also a medical oncologist at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the founding director of the Young-Onset Colorectal Cancer Center. And our final guest:
Tomotaka Ugai: My name is Tomotaka Ugai, I’m a cancer epidemiologist at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
Laine Perfas: Tomo is also an instructor at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and a founder of the International Cancer Spectrum Consortium.
And I’m Samantha Laine Perfas, your host and a writer for The Harvard Gazette. Today we’ll look at early-onset cancer and how younger people can navigate their increased risk.
I think it’s important to start with the context of cancer overall, which is that rates have been declining in recent years. However, some cancers are on the rise, specifically in people under 50. What are we seeing?
Ugai: I think when we talk about increase in early-onset cancer, this is not a simple story. The incidence of early-onset cancer has been increasing in many parts of the world, but this is different between cancer types, regions, and countries. So we need to know more about such differences. Our recent analysis shows that many early-onset cancer types, including colorectal cancer, breast cancer, uterine cancer, kidney cancer, pancreatic cancer, and multiple myeloma have increased more rapidly compared to late-onset cancer types. Also for colorectal cancer and uterine cancer, both the incidence and mortality have increased concurrently. And this phenomenon is mainly observed in high socioeconomic countries, including the United States, the U.K., Australia, and New Zealand.
“Our recent analysis shows that many early-onset cancer types, including colorectal cancer, breast cancer, uterine cancer, kidney cancer, pancreatic cancer, and multiple myeloma have increased more rapidly compared to late-onset cancer types.”
Rebbeck: If I could just add to what Tomo said, I think one of the very interesting observations that he raised is that what we’ve been observing over the last couple of decades is increases in cancers diagnosed under the age of 50, at many different tumor sites, around the world, in men and women. And it’s a phenomenon that we’ve barely ever seen in the past. The last time we saw this kind of phenomenon on a global scale and with such changes was lung cancer in the mid-20th century, when it started rising from almost a rare cancer to the most common cancer. But we figured that out pretty quickly; that was cigarette smoking. In this case, we’re talking about probably major exposures or something like that, but we’re also talking about many cancers all over the world. And so there’s something really critical and interesting going on here.
Ng: And what’s interesting is if you look closely at the epidemiologic trends, they follow what we call a birth cohort effect, where the increase is really varying by generation. To give you an example for colorectal cancer, somebody who is born in 1990 now has quadruple the risk of developing rectal cancer and over double the risk of developing colon cancer compared to a similarly aged person who was born in 1950. And this is important because it gives us clues as to what might be underlying the rising trends And what a birth cohort effect usually suggests is that it’s a combination of some environmental exposures that are affecting the incidence by generation.
Laine Perfas: Kimmie, could you tell me a little bit more about the birth cohort effect, and also what’s it been like treating patients who are now developing these cancers at a much younger age?
Ng: If you look at the trends, the rise has been happening in every birth cohort basically since 1950. But the trends have been formally documented in published literature since probably the mid-1990s. So for colorectal cancer, for example, we have been seeing about a two percent per year rise in the rates of colorectal cancer in both men and women since the mid-1990s, and it is estimated that by the year 2030, colorectal cancer will be the leading cause of cancer-related death in people under the age of 50.
It is well-known that the challenges faced by younger people diagnosed with cancer are very different than the challenges faced by older people. And that was partly the impetus for us starting our dedicated Young-Onset Colorectal Cancer Center so that we can better address these unique issues that affect young people and that ranges from issues about fertility — many of these people are still trying to expand their families or start their families. It extends to sexual health. It extends to career and education disruptions, and over 80 percent of young patients with colorectal cancer have children under the age of 18 when they’re often diagnosed with an advanced stage of disease. Many are also in the sandwich generation when they’re taking care of elderly parents as well. It’s just such a difficult time to be hit with a terminal cancer diagnosis. And so there are high levels of psychosocial distress. Many need social work support and psychiatric support, so we are trying to provide them with all of that through our center.
Laine Perfas: It’s interesting that the last time a phenomenon like this happened it was with lung cancer. It was then directly linked to smoking cigarettes. Do we have any sense of what might be contributing to the current trends?
Rebbeck: We certainly have many hypotheses that make sense. Many of those of course, include diet, lifestyle, obesity, alcohol, and tobacco use. So major exposures, so they would have to be fairly common exposures in order to see the rate changes that we’re observing. They would have to be fairly general carcinogen exposures, meaning they would have to be influencing cancers at multiple sites. Because that’s what we’re seeing. They would have to be acting in men and women since that’s what we’re seeing in the epidemiological data. And they would have to be things that have probably been changing over the past decades worldwide. And so you can imagine what some of those are. I’m sure we’ll hear more from Tomo and Kimmie about this and some of the work they’ve done. But obesity fits that pattern very well. Obesity is something that has increased in recent decades substantially. it’s changed across the world. It’s happening in men and women, particularly it’s happening in children. If to the degree that obesity is a leading explanation for these changes, it’s probably happening earlier in life and children. And the lag that we’re seeing between changes in the exposure and the advent of the earlier-onset cancers is probably happening in a lag that started earlier in life, obviously early-onset cancers. And so all of those pieces fit, I’m guessing it’s not the only explanation. And there are many other hypotheses out there that you can guess, microplastics, or like you can begin to think about all the things that might be going on that have changed in recent decades.
Ugai: I think there are several important clues for potential causes for the increase in early-onset cancers. First, as Kimmie mentioned, there is a birth cohort effect, which means that more recent generations have a higher risk of early-onset cancers; this effect is linked to the change in environmental factors or lifestyle factors for many years. For example, many lifestyle factors such as obesity, physical inactivity, diet, and some environmental factors such as air pollution have changed since 1940 to 1950, which may be a very important factor.
“There are several important clues for potential causes for increase in early-onset cancers. … Many lifestyle factors such as obesity, physical inactivity, diet, and some environmental factors such as air pollution have changed since 1940 to 1950.”
Second, as I mentioned, several early-onset cancer types have increased more rapidly compared to later-onset cancers. This suggests that certain exposures, such as new risk factors or established risk factors, have shifted toward younger populations. For example, the prevalence of obesity has increased among younger populations but also pollutions or microenvironments or some other toxins can be considered potential new risk factors for early-onset cancers.
Ng: Just to follow up on this discussion about obesity, I agree it has been posited as the leading hypothesis for why early-onset cancers have been rising globally. And indeed, if you look at the cancer types that have been increasing in young people, they are all known to be associated with obesity, including uterine cancer and cancers of the digestive system, which don’t only include colorectal cancer, but also pancreatic cancer, biliary tract cancer, appendix cancers, and so many different others. However, I can tell you that in our clinics here at Dana-Farber, the patients we’re seeing for the most part are not obese and they live healthy and active lifestyles. They eat very healthily. So I do think while obesity is certainly a contributor to the rising trends, it is probably not the only answer.
“In our clinics here at Dana-Farber, the patients we’re seeing for the most part are not obese and they live healthy and active lifestyles. … So I do think while obesity is certainly a contributor to the rising trends, it is probably not the only answer.”
Laine Perfas: There are actually people in my life who are very young and active and healthy who are shocked to find out that they have cancer and they’re not always easily treatable, some of them are very aggressive. Thinking about the trends, it’s hard not to be like, I was born in the ’90s, is that just a reality that my generation is facing, that my rates are going to be four times higher than someone born in the 1950s regardless of my choices? Do we have more agency than that?
Ng: I will say that following a healthy diet and lifestyle and maintaining a normal body weight is still so critically important. And I think Tim was mentioning these factors and behaviors in early life are what we think are the important time window of exposure that leads to increased susceptibility to these cancers in young adulthood.
So I do still think it is really important for public health agencies and the health system in general to educate children, adolescents on the importance of a healthy diet and lifestyle and on maintaining a normal body weight. Because those things will likely not only protect you against developing multiple different cancers at whatever age, but also against a host of other chronic diseases.
Rebbeck: The other point I’d add to that is, depending on how you hear this message as a person born in the ’80s, ’90s, I could imagine people panicking about that. And I think it’s important to keep in perspective that most of these cancers are still predominantly diagnosed in older individuals over the age of 50. It’s not like individuals under the age of 50, age 40 are now the main people diagnosed with these cancers. That’s not the case. It’s certainly true that we have a much, much higher risk of cancer now than we did earlier if you’re under the age of 50. But it is still relatively rare.
Ugai: I just want to follow up with Kimmie’s very important point about early-life exposures. Evidence indicates that early-life healthy diet is associated with reduced risk of early-onset colorectal cancer. So if you’re parents, you can start healthy diets or healthy lifestyle as soon as possible. At the same time, you can teach such healthy lifestyles to children so that children can have reduced risk.
Laine Perfas: We can adopt healthier habits, but I also want to talk about genetics, something we can’t change. What role do genetics play?
Rebbeck: It’s well-known that individuals who have an inherited predisposition to cancer tend to be diagnosed at a younger age. So individuals who are diagnosed with hereditary breast cancer because they’ve inherited a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation, the average age of breast cancer diagnosis, for example, is 10 years younger than the general population. Genetics, and particularly these high-penetrance hereditary patterns of cancer, are certainly associated with the early ages of onset. But what we don’t see or don’t anticipate is that changes in the germline genetic pattern that create these very high risks have changed substantially over the last decades. We don’t expect that germline genetics, frequencies, mutation types or whatever have changed so much that it would explain the majority of these early-onset diagnosis differences that we’ve observed. Having said that, cancer is a genetic disease. There’s always underlying susceptibility to cancer. And it’s possible and perhaps even likely that there are gene-environment interactions that people who have an underlying susceptibility and now are being exposed to whatever the major factors are, that they’re becoming penetrant. They’re becoming diagnosed earlier and earlier because of those interactions between genes and environments.
Ng: This is such an important topic because, I completely agree, if you look at gastrointestinal cancers and those that are happening in people under the age of 50, probably up to a quarter or so are found to have a hereditary reason for having developed that cancer at a young age. But that leaves 75 percent having sporadic cancers not related to family history or a hereditary predisposition, but because you are much more likely to identify a hereditary condition the younger you are diagnosed, it is important that the standard of care includes hereditary genetic testing for any young person under the age of 50 who is diagnosed with cancer.
Laine Perfas: I’m curious to hear what you all think about the lowering of screening ages for various cancers. For example, colorectal cancer was lowered from 50 to 45. Breast cancer screening has actually fluctuated multiple times. What are the pros and cons of screening earlier?
Ugai: As you said, in 2018, the American Cancer Society recommended initiating colorectal cancer screening at the age of 45 instead of age 50 in the average-risk populations. I personally think that this approach would work. But at the same time, we need to think more about cost-effectiveness, invasiveness, and potential complications. Yeah, this is a little bit difficult to decide.
Rebbeck: To Tomo’s point also because cancers are rarer in earlier ages, lowering the age of screening is inherently less efficient, if you will. We’ll detect fewer cancers if we screen the same number of people because they’re just rarer. And so the notion of changing cancer screening ages for those that we can screen in this situation, colorectal, breast, for example, the approaches probably pay off a little bit less. What are the risks and trade-offs and cost benefits? And I think that’s really an important consideration for our public health.
Ng: I do think that lowering the screening age for average-risk individuals for colorectal cancer down to 45 is a good first step in the right direction. The majority of young-onset colorectal cancers are diagnosed in people in their 40s. However, going back again to those epidemiologic trends, the rates of rise are actually steepest in the very youngest patients who are below the eligible age of screening. And so clearly lowering the age or basing screening recommendations on chronological age alone is going to be insufficient for addressing this problem of early-onset cancers. And what I think this means is that it really highlights the importance of doing the research to better understand, what exactly are the risk factors? Who is at risk? What are the causes? And then, can we identify the young people who are at higher risk of colorectal cancer and target them for earlier screening?
Rebbeck: I think that’s really important, because we’ve seen that population-based screening has value in many situations, but risk-adaptive screening approaches are becoming more and more relevant and appropriate, and particularly in this situation. So for example, not only in breast cancer do we think about different ways of screening, like we would use MRI in very young women, not mammography, for example, but the timing of those, the cadence of that screening. So as we start talking about more unusual individuals, because of their risk, and in a rarer situation like colorectal cancer in the 30s, a population-wide screening, it becomes less and less compelling, and a targeted screening kind of approach or targeted early detection is probably what we need to be thinking more and more about.
Laine Perfas: Have screening changes made a difference or is it still too early to tell?
Ng: There actually was just a recent paper published in JAMA this month that did show that the uptake of colorectal cancer screening in people between the ages of 45 and 49 has been slowly picking up since the United States Preventive Services Task Force issued their revised guidelines to lower the age. And actually, there does seem to be a promising shift toward detecting more early-stage cancers now because of the recent guideline change. So I think it is starting to work. It is still early days, but I do hope the uptake will continue.
Rebbeck: And I think one of the interesting observations is that most of the cancers that we’re talking about don’t have screening modalities. Colorectal cancer is clearly the 500-pound gorilla of this conversation, in part because it’s a common cancer, but it also has very clear, actionable things you can do, like colonoscopy. Most of these other cancers don’t. And I think that screening is critically important, but we can’t do that for pancreatic cancer or kidney cancer or whatever. And so there’s a lot of other issues that we need to think about beyond screening for most of these cancers.
Ugai: Also I would like to add one more important thing about early-onset cancer and screening. So the increase in early-onset cancer can be probably partially attributable to increasing screening and early detection. And also, advances in a cancer registry system or screening devices can also affect the increasing incidence of early-onset cancers. Again, it’s important to better understand what’s going on at the global scale.
Laine Perfas: Are you saying it’s possible that the increase in rates is partially due to simply an increase in screening, that the cancers may have been there before, we just didn’t know about them because we weren’t screening for them?
Ugai: Yes, that’s true, and for example, for thyroid cancer and prostate cancers, when we looked at the actual data, the incidence of early-onset prostate cancer and thyroid cancer has been increasing for the past few decades. But when we looked at both incidence and mortality, the mortality has not increased. So potentially, this increase might not be true and this is attributable to increasing screening.
Ng: I just want to point out though that is not true for colorectal cancer, right? The rise has been documented since the mid-1990s when screening age was 50, and most of the cases of young-onset colorectal cancer are late-stage cancer, Stage 3 or 4, both points of which really rule out this rise as being a screening effect.
Rebbeck: It’s very true. There’s a great example in South Korea a couple decades ago where they started screening for thyroid cancer and the rates skyrocketed. The mortality rates stayed exactly the same, because there’s a lot of thyroid cancer in the population that’s indolent and doesn’t cause any problems. Similarly, as Tomo was saying, with prostate cancer, lots of indolent prostate cancer. I’m not sure that’s the case with colorectal cancer, that there isn’t a lot of indolent colorectal cancer that just sits there for many decades and doesn’t progress. So I think each cancer is going to be different. Each cancer probably needs to be thought of in terms of screening and in terms of overdiagnosis, and the value of screening. They’re all going to be quite different.
Just as a note for prostate cancer, which I think is a great sort of canary in the coal mine for the kind of things that we anticipate happening in cancer screening. The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force changed its guidelines about prostate cancer screening with PSA over many years. And in the most recent change that happened about 2018, when they started slowing down that screening, in more recent periods — last few years — now the mortality in prostate cancer is starting to rise. That took a long time to have happen, and it’s not an early-onset cancer by any means, but I think that when we see these very broad changes in policy and guidelines, if the screening is making a difference, we will eventually see changes to mortality.
Ng: Yeah, it’s so important to consider the individual screening practices of each country as you compare global trends in early-onset cancer incidence. As an example, in Japan and South Korea, there is population-based and opportunistic screening for gastric cancer. And so the rates of gastric cancer have actually not been rising in young people or older people in those countries. It’s really important to take into consideration what different countries do when interpreting incidence trends.
Laine Perfas: It is pretty well-known that early detection is a key to better, more effective treatment. Beyond just screening, what barriers stand in the way to earlier detection?
Rebbeck: In colorectal cancer, of course, it’s the ability and willingness for people to have a colonoscopy. And Kimmie can probably talk a lot about this from her experience, but colonoscopies, while very effective, are things nobody likes. It’s hard to do. It’s icky. It’s not something that is an easy thing. And there are some clear barriers there. And I’d be interested to hear the others’ opinions about a tiered approach where we use fecal occult blood or FIT testing or something like that as an adjunct to a colonoscopy. Are there better approaches that might maximize the ability to detect cancers even among people who may be resistant to doing the gold standard colonoscopy?
Ng: On top of personal reasons why somebody would not want to get a colonoscopy, there are also other logistical barriers, right? Especially for people who have to work multiple jobs and cannot take time off from work to do the bowel prep and then find a ride to their colonoscopy and find a ride home from their colonoscopy. These are real challenges that many people face on a daily basis that really prevent them from being able to do screening. And so I think that is why it’s so important that the United States Preventive Services Task Force included a menu of different test options as ways to screen for colorectal cancer. Because a home-based stool test may be much easier for somebody to do than overcoming all those logistics to get to their colonoscopy.
Ugai: In addition to that, I just want to highlight the importance of increasing awareness of early-onset cancers. Maybe we can speak up more, but also we can collaborate with industries or policymakers to increase awareness of early-onset cancers.
Rebbeck: And I would add to that list clinicians, primary care clinicians, people who might be the first line in identifying people who might have symptoms of colorectal cancer but the patient is 30 years old and they don’t think about it, or they put it off as something else. So I think there’s a lot of awareness on lots of different levels to ensure we get people into the right care pathways at the earliest possible time.
Ng: I also think there is a stigma around certain cancers that prevents conversations about the diagnosis, about the symptoms. Patients are not comfortable bringing up symptoms related to their bowels to their primary care physicians or even raising them to their family members. And so I do think normalizing conversations around some of these issues will also go a long way in raising awareness.
Laine Perfas: There is still so much that we don’t know. What should we be researching or where should we be looking next for answers?
Rebbeck: The generic answer to that is to understand what the lifestyle, obesity, adiposity, environmental exposures are likely to be. And we have a lot of clues already from studies, but those studies are very difficult to do and they require very large sample sizes done appropriately. They may require prospective cohorts that may take years or decades to follow. And the gold standard of identifying these kinds of risk factors is something that we won’t have an answer for immediately.
Ng: This is such a challenging problem to study, and the life course studies are probably the best way to understand what’s happening in childhood that then changes you somehow to make you at increased risk of developing cancer in young adulthood. But those take too long, would be too costly. And we really can’t wait that long for answers, honestly. Because of how complex this phenomenon is, it really is going to take a multidisciplinary team. We need epidemiologists. We need oncologists, basic scientists, environmental health experts all working together to really try to understand what the underlying etiologies are.
Rebbeck: And there may be a great opportunity for a quick turnaround of basic science. Basic science can happen a lot more quickly than these large epidemiological studies. And if we really had a good sense of what the molecular etiology, the mechanism of early-onset cancers is, is it different than later-onset cancers? Are the molecular signatures in those tumors different?
Ng: To give an example, actually, there was a recent paper published in Nature that identified a mutational signature in DNA caused by a genotoxin called colibactin that seems to be a lot more common in younger people who develop colorectal cancer than older people who develop colorectal cancer. And it’s exciting because it’s the first evidence that the microbiome, because we think a bug called pks+ E. coli is producing this colibactin to damage DNA, may be the contributor. It’s not going to explain all of early-onset colorectal cancer, but it does implicate potentially the microbiome as a reason for why this might be happening worldwide.
Laine Perfas: What advice do you have to empower our listeners to better manage their health and mitigate their cancer risk?
Rebbeck: Awareness. Understand the symptoms of some of these cancers and ask questions. Become educated, and not only about colorectal cancer, but many of these early-onset cancers in individuals who are under the age of 50. And, as Kimmie said earlier, live a healthy lifestyle: Eat well, exercise, keep your weight down, all the things that we know from all of the other advice we’ve gotten around cancer and other diseases. Those are certainly things that are empowering. People can do those; none of them are easy, but people can do them to minimize their risks.
Ng: I would also say for the cancers that do have screening guidelines and programs, get screened, because that could be lifesaving. And something else that’s important to mention is to know your family history too, because if there is a family history of that cancer in your relatives, especially if it happened at a young age in those relatives, then you can qualify to get screened at an earlier age, and that as well can be lifesaving.
Ugai: The important thing is healthy lifestyle and healthy diet. The important fact is that many established cancer risk factors overlap between early-onset and regular-onset cancer. So if you can avoid established cancer risk factors, you can reduce the risk of other non-communicable disease. Early life exposure can be very important, so you can avoid such cancer risk factors as soon as possible. At the same time, you can teach such a beneficial, healthy lifestyle to younger populations. I think that’s important.
Laine Perfas: Thank you all for taking time to talk to me today about this.
Rebbeck: Thank you for having us.
Ng: Thank you for having us.
Laine Perfas: Thanks for listening. If you’d like to see a transcript of this episode or listen to our other episodes, visit harvard.edu/thinking. To support us, rate us on Apple Podcasts and Spotify, or share this episode with a friend or colleague. This episode was hosted and produced by me, Samantha Laine Perfas, with production and editing support from Sarah Lamodi, edited by Ryan Mulcahy and Paul Makishima. Original music and sound designed by Noel Flatt, produced by Harvard University. Copyright 2025.
‘Human exceptionalism is at the root of the ecological crisis’
Saving the planet requires getting over ourselves, argues author of ‘The Arrogant Ape’
Kermit Pattison
Harvard Staff Writer
5 min read
In the grand story of evolution, the crowning human distinction is our big brain. But our large heads have been slow to recognize a less admirable trait of Homo sapiens — self-centeredness.
The human presumption of superiority and entitlement to exploit the natural world is deeply rooted in our religious, cultural, and scientific traditions — and now we are witnessing the consequences, said Christine Webb, a former Harvard lecturer and author of “The Arrogant Ape: The Myth of Human Exceptionalism and Why It Matters.”
“Human exceptionalism is at the root of the ecological crisis,” Webb told a Science Center audience of more than 100 people recently as part of the Harvard Science Book Talks. “This pervasive mindset gives humans a sense of dominion over the rest of nature, set apart from and entitled to commodify the Earth and other species for their own exclusive use.”
The central thesis of her book is that anthropocentrism — or what Webb calls the “human superiority complex” — has pushed our planet to environmental crises such as mass extinctions, rising sea levels, forest fires, and more.
“I’ve come to think of the arrogant ape not as a species, or a culture, or even an individual, but as a tragic protagonist in a Greek drama, blinded by their own hubris,” said Webb. “This unfortunate and dangerous way of viewing our world is a brainwashing of such major proportions that many people remain entirely unaware of it.”
“When you measure the world with a ruler made for humans other species will inevitably look inferior.”
Without doubt, humans are unique in many attributes (we are the only species known to send rockets into space or convene book talks). But all species, Webb wrote, have evolved specialized adaptations to their environments and are wondrous in their own rights. Still, we humans tend to see our own characteristics as more exalted — and, thanks to our technological prowess — view the rest of the natural world as a resource that we are entitled to harvest without constraint.
As Webb wrote, “Human exceptionalism suggests that what is distinctive about humans is more worthy and advanced than the distinguishing features of other forms of life.”
Now an assistant professor at New York University, Webb previously served as a lecturer in Harvard’s Department of Human Evolutionary Biology. The book grew out of her experience teaching an undergraduate seminar here also titled “The Arrogant Ape.”
“So many of the ideas that are folded into this book are students’ ideas,” she told the audience. “I was incredibly inspired by the discussions that took place.”
The book traces how the human sense of exceptionalism has deep roots in the Judeo-Christian religious tradition, Western thought, and even science.
Shakespeare’s Hamlet called humans “the paragon of animals.” In the 18th century, Carl Linnaeus, the founder of biological classification, designated the taxonomic order that includes humans, apes, and monkeys as “primates” to assign us first rank and dubbed our species “Homo sapiens” or “the wise man.” In the 1730s, poet Alexander Pope advised that, “The proper study of mankind is man.” Accordingly, the humanities celebrate the study of you-know-who.
The very notion of “progress” came to mean human command over nature. Thanks to our ever-advancing scientific and technological knowledge — and a global population that has now reached 8 billion — humans lay claim to an ever-greater share of the world’s resources. As Webb wrote, “the notion of human distinction and the exploitation of the natural world go hand in hand.”
Human exceptionalism has become an unquestioned assumption — something rarely articulated or opened to debate. As Webb told the audience, “it derives power from its invisibility.”
Science too has absorbed this bias. Two centuries ago, Charles Darwin warned of the human habit of flattering ourselves with self-affirming categorizations, but generations of evolutionists continued falling prey to the same old traps. According to Webb, a primatologist who has studied wild baboons and gorillas in Africa, comparative studies often are designed with confirmation bias or use human attributes as metrics of evolutionary advancement.
“When you measure the world with a ruler made for humans,” she said, “other species will inevitably look inferior.” Webb drew a laugh when she showed a clip from the satirical newspaper The Onion headlined “Study: Dolphins Not So Intelligent On Land.”
Yet, Webb argued, the human presumption of superiority is a learned behavior. Many children exhibit a natural empathy for animals and humans have an innate sense of wonder for nature that Harvard biologist E.O. Wilson termed “biophilia.”
The remedy to our ecological crisis, she believes, is embracing a trait that is often undervalued: humility. In reawakening ourselves to the wondrous diversity of nature, we might become more willing to preserve it.
“Shedding this anthropocentric lens, I believe, can yield very humbling realizations,” she concluded in her talk, “and this humility might impart true wisdom — the quality our species, Homo sapiens, has assigned itself, yet one we can only ever truly realize by unlearning human exceptionalism.”
Lauren Williams awarded MacArthur ‘genius grant’Math professor honored for theoretical breakthroughs with sometimes surprising applications across phenomena such as tsunamis, traffic
Math professor honored for theoretical breakthroughs with sometimes surprising applications across phenomena such as tsunamis, traffic
Lauren Williams ’00 is a theoretical mathematician and recently she felt stuck in her research, a recurring frustration for a scholar who wrestles with difficult conceptual problems.
Then, as Williams worked quietly in her home office, she was jolted by an unexpected revelation: The MacArthur Foundation phoned to inform Williams that she had won a celebrated “genius grant” — a “no-strings-attached” fellowship that provides recipients $800,000 over five years.
“I was completely shocked,” recalled Williams, Dwight Parker Robinson Professor of Mathematics. “I was just sort of trying to verify for myself that I was awake, and this was real.”
Williams was one of 22 fellows announced Wednesday. The MacArthur Foundation credited Williams for “elucidating unexpected connections” between her field of algebraic combinatorics and other areas in math and physics.
The foundation said: “With a curiosity-driven approach to research and willingness to collaborate across disciplines, Williams is expanding fundamental mathematical theory and building fruitful connections between mathematics and other scientific fields.”
Williams leading a class in 2018.
Harvard file photo
Williams specializes in algebra and combinatorics and how they can be applied to problems in math and physics. Simply put, combinatorics is the study of discrete, finite things that can be counted as opposed to things that are continuous — think the continuous surface of the ocean vs. the waves.
Much of her work involves the “positive Grassmannian,” a geometric shape whose points represent simpler geometric objects.
Other scholars have discovered that her theoretical work applies to a diverse array of phenomena such as shallow water waves, tsunamis, collisions of fundamental particles, protein synthesis, and the flow of traffic on one-way streets.
Williams remains both fascinated and perplexed about why the positive Grassmannian keeps popping up in such disparate domains. “It’s one of the biggest mysteries that I’ve encountered,” she said.
Williams draws inspiration from a quotation from British mathematician G.H. Hardy: “The mathematician’s patterns, like the painter’s or the poet’s must be beautiful; the ideas like the colours or the words, must fit together in a harmonious way. Beauty is the first test: There is no permanent place in the world for ugly mathematics.”
“If you ask a question and the answer is not beautiful, that means you asked the wrong question.”
At an aesthetic level, Williams sees many parallels between her work in pure math and the arts: all solve puzzles within the rules of the medium; all involve patterns, beauty, and harmony.
“If you ask a question and the answer is not beautiful, that means you asked the wrong question,” she said.
Raised in the suburbs of Los Angeles, Williams grew up as a voracious reader, aspiring writer, and violinist. In fourth grade, she discovered she was good at math when she won her school district competition, and she continued pursuing her interest in summer programs and math competitions.
As a Harvard undergraduate, she majored in mathematics at a time when there were no women on the department faculty.
After earning her Ph.D. at MIT, she returned to Harvard on a Benjamin Peirce postdoctoral fellowship. She spent nine years on the faculty at the University of California at Berkeley before returning to Harvard in 2018 as only the second female tenured professor in the history of the Math Department.
With the MacArthur grant turning a spotlight on her corner of academia, Williams hopes to inspire other young women who aspire to careers in mathematics.
“When I was a student, I worried quite a lot about whether I could get an academic job and whether a career in academia was compatible with having children,” said Williams, now a mother of two. “To the students who are interested in a career in math academia but are worried about the same issues, I would very much encourage them to go for it.”
Her career has been a balancing act — sometimes quite literally. As a young professor, Williams had an infant who was a fitful sleeper and night after night, she and her husband took turns rocking the child to sleep by bobbing on a yoga ball.
“If you’re holding a baby in a dark room, gently bouncing, there’s nothing you can do except think,” said Williams. “One night, I started thinking about a question and that actually led to my next paper.”
(Also among this year’s MacArthur cohort was Hahrie Han ’97, a political science professor at Johns Hopkins University who was recognized for her research into how people engage in civil and political affairs.)
For Williams, the award comes at an opportune moment. She had three federal research grants terminated in May — including one for a conference scheduled for the following month, forcing her and her colleagues to scramble to reorganize the event.
“This award really couldn’t come at a better time, personally,” she said.
At a larger level, the recognition is about more than one scholar. Like her beloved positive Grassmannian, her achievement reflects those of many others.
“I’m shocked and honored, but also just incredibly grateful to the dozens, if not hundreds, of amazing teachers, mentors, collaborators, friends, and family members who have supported me,” said Williams. “The biggest overwhelming reaction for me is really just gratitude.”
Physicists go to extremes to capture quantum materials
Researchers at the Rowland Institute at Harvard have pioneered a new way to achieve the coolest possible temperatures to image materials at sub-atomic scale. In combining the technical know-how of Rowland staff scientists with collaborators at the University of Michigan, the findings make possible a new era of ultra-cold microscopy.
Cryogenic transmission electron microscopy — TEM — has long played a vital role in many branches of science, from biology to physics, because the very low temperatures allow close examination of samples of everything from inorganic crystals to complex biomolecules at the atomic scale. Typically, the cryogen, or cooling agent, is liquid nitrogen, which boils at 321 below zero Fahrenheit (or 77 Kelvin) — impressive, but not cold enough to see those strange quantum wriggles.
That’s why scientists have strived over the last decade to go colder by using liquid helium, which boils at 421 below zero Fahrenheit, or 4 Kelvin, and is very close to “absolute zero.” But this comes with serious technical problems that affect the mechanical stability of the microscope.
Harvard researchers envisioned a new way to use liquid helium for a more stable approach to this high-level microscopy, a breakthrough explained in a paper published last month in PNAS. Led by principal investigator and Rowland fellow Ismail El Baggari, the team built novel partnerships to create a usable new technology, both within the institute and outside, with University of Michigan Professor Robert Hovden. The research is among the first high-impact papers (another was robot flies) since Rowland moved to Harvard’s science campus a year ago.
The original concept of cryogenic cooling during microscopy to preserve the structure of biological molecules — which led to the 2017 Nobel Prize for chemistry — was to use it to study cells, proteins, and other soft matter. However, El Baggari and Suk Hyun Sung, a postdoc on the team, saw its potential in quantum physics.
“We’re physicists and we’re interested in imaging weird materials called quantum materials that have different properties at low temperatures,” said El Baggari, noting that electrons exhibit quantum behavior, only at extremely low temperatures. “And so we need to cool down the materials to access those new properties.” Liquid helium cooling was seen as a means to do this.
To utilize liquid helium, however, the researchers had to have an electron microscope that would allow such cooling. “In the past, we’ve used electron microscopy to image the atomic structure of these materials at high temperatures, but it turns out that it’s very difficult to get high-resolution images with liquid helium cooling,” El Baggari said.
“Liquid helium evaporates so quickly and so easily any external heat vaporizes it,” he added. “That then introduces vibrations as bubbles form, as the flow is disturbed by a mixture of gas and liquid.”
These vibrations blurred the images in the way a bubbling glass saucepan of boiling water obscures the view through the pot, though that’s visible when the water is cold. The fast evaporation also meant that the cold temperatures could be maintained for only about 20 minutes, far too short for meaningful measurements.
“We built a geophone for the microscope that is so sensitive, it can detect vibrations within fractions of atomic distance.”
Winfield Hill, director of electronic engineering
The vibration sensor.
The electron microscope specimen holder.
To solve this problem, the researchers needed to create a method that would allow the use of liquid helium, but in a way that didn’t allow vibrations. The researchers collaborated with Rowland manager Erik Madsen; director of electronic engineering Winfield Hill; and Alan Stern, a staff computational scientist. Together, they built a system that could maintain cold temperatures for hours on end. They also tracked and isolated the vibrations of the cooling system from reaching the specimen.
“We had the general ideas, but we didn’t know at the start the details of cryogenic design, machining to high tolerances, and precision electronics,” said El Baggari. “We had to develop new tools and processes to begin tackling our problems.”
“Ismail had the idea to use geophones to detect minuscule vibrations in the ultra-cold TEM set-up, up to identify places to dampen the ‘noise,’ particularly on the liquid helium input. So we built a geophone for the microscope that is so sensitive, it can detect vibrations within fractions of atomic distance — exactly the scale needed for this microscope to be able to image clearly at sub-atomic resolution,” said Hill.
The stakes were high because of the complexity of the machines. “These microscopes are multimillion-dollar machines, and it was quite nerve-wracking to think about inserting our own new instrument in what has never been tested,” said Sung.
Into this huge and delicate machine, he continued, the builders had to create site entry holders that “would fit in like a glass slide fits into an ordinary microscope — without breaking anything.” The sample had to land in the right position of within 25 microns, or a third of the width of human hair. Any deviations meant the sample could not be imaged, vibrations were excessive, or vacuum levels were poor.
“For the first months of building things, we were just measuring commercially available site entry holders, making sure that all the dimensions were correct,” continued Sung. “We didn’t know what the critical dimensions were because all the holders were slightly different, and we didn’t know what actually mattered.” After three years of testing the sample holder and improving vibration isolation, the team was able to capture the first high-resolution images in quantum materials while operating for many hours at ultracool temperatures.
“Suddenly we were studying materials that we historically had only been able to examine at room temperature,” said El Baggari. “We were never able to image them while they were actually exhibiting the emergent properties that we and our collaborators are interested in. So now we can actually use the electron microscope as a primary tool to directly tackle these quantum electronic phases in materials.”
Continued improvements of the new tool could open new fields of inquiry, such as simultaneously applying a voltage to working devices or manipulating materials by stretching or pressing on them. “The microscopy experiments that we’ve been routinely doing at room temperatures, we can now do it at low temperatures where things get even more exciting,” he said.
The research described in this article was partially funded by the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy.
A condition more common than asthma or diabetes, yet often ignoredWomen with heavy menstrual bleeding wait five years on average for care. Wyss technology could change that.
The Wyss Institute has developed “organ chips” for the lungs, the intestines, the vagina, the cervix, and the fallopian tubes, among others.
A condition more common than asthma or diabetes, yet often ignored
Women with heavy menstrual bleeding wait five years on average for care. Wyss technology could change that.
Sy Boles
Harvard Staff Writer
4 min read
Every minute, a woman in the U.S. requires a blood transfusion due to heavy menstrual bleeding, or HMB. One in three women reports having the condition — which can lead to iron deficiency and anemia — and missing an average of 3.6 weeks of work a year, costing the U.S. economy roughly $94 billion annually, according to the nonprofit Wellcome Leap. Patients routinely suffer for up to five years before they get help, despite HMB being more common than asthma or diabetes in reproductive-aged women.
Despite the condition’s ubiquity and seriousness, its causes are poorly understood.
To address this gap, Donald Ingber, founding director of the Wyss Institute and the Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at Harvard Medical School and the Vascular Biology Program at Boston Children’s Hospital, is developing the first human model of HMB. In September, the institute announced it had received funding from Wellcome Leap’s $50 million Missed Vital Sign program to build an organ-on-a-chip model of menstruation, using the platform Ingber first developed at the Wyss in 2010.
The goal? Reduce the time it takes a woman to get effective treatment for HMB more than 10-fold — from an average of five years to five months.
“Women’s health has been ignored for so long — and that goes well beyond reproductive health,” Ingber said. “This technology can break down that inequality and focus on women’s health in a direct way.”
An organ on a chip is effectively a “living, 3D cross-section of a major functional unit of an organ,” explained Ingber, who is also the Hansjörg Wyss Professor of Biologically Inspired Engineering at the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.
Donald Ingber.
File photo by Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer
The chips allow researchers to strip out the complex, interconnected operations of the human body in order to study one piece of it at a time. His lab has already developed functional organ chips for the lungs, the intestines, the vagina, the cervix, and the fallopian tubes, among others.
Ingber plans to use the new menstruation organ-on-a-chip model to explore a range of potential drivers, including genetic mutations, hypoxia or low-oxygen conditions, microbiomic conditions, and inflammation. But first, he and his team need to create the model.
“I always tell my grad students, you always want to reduce a problem down to one molecule of a problem,” Ingber explained. “What makes an organ is two or more tissues that come together and new functions emerge. … So can we simplify something as complex as organ physiology?”
The chips work by isolating a small piece of organ-level function in a controlled environment. Each chip has two parallel channels separated by a porous membrane. One channel contains living human vasculature lined with endothelial cells — the same type of cells that form the inner walls of capillaries and control the exchange of nutrients, gases, and waste — and in some cases connective tissue cells that form a support for overlying lining cells in the body. The neighboring channel is lined by organ-specific epithelial cells that line different organs, including those that form the reproductive tract. Researchers can introduce various stimuli into either channel and observe how the tissues respond. Side channels can be used to apply suction, stretching and compressing the tissue to mimic movements such as breathing and peristalsis.
“We have the ability to control many different parameters individually,” Ingber said. “Is it exactly like in vivo? No. But that’s what every model is: It’s an approximation, and it’s much better than an animal model.”
The comparison to an animal model is apt. With the exception of a species called the Cairo spiny mouse, mice don’t menstruate. Instead, they have what’s called an estrous cycle, in which the endometrium — the lining of the uterus — is reabsorbed into the body.
This biological difference creates a real challenge for medical research. Mice are widely used in preclinical studies because their biology closely mirrors that of humans in important ways. But when it comes to studying the human menstrual cycle, including disorders like heavy menstrual bleeding, the standard animal models fall short — contributing to disparities in research around women’s health.
As part of its broader efforts to reduce disparities in women’s health, the Wyss Institute houses the Women’s Health Catalyst, a research hub that has led work in areas such as lactation, early detection of ovarian cancer, and better treatment of endometriosis, among other projects. Ingber said the organ-on-a-chip has the potential to revolutionize research into understudied areas of women’s reproductive health.
‘She had a sense of caring for everybody that she encountered.’Richard Wrangham remembers his teacher and colleague Jane Goodall as a force of science, empathy, and hope
‘She had a sense of caring for everybody that she encountered.’
Jane Goodall speaking at Harvard after receiving the Roger Tory Peterson medal in 2007.
File photo by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
Alvin Powell
Harvard Staff Writer
6 min read
Richard Wrangham remembers his teacher and colleague Jane Goodall as a force of science, empathy, and hope
When the scientist and conservationist Jane Goodall died last week, she left behind a transformed understanding of humankind’s relationship to its closest ape cousins — chimpanzees — as well as a legacy that highlights the implications of that relationship in understanding ourselves.
Richard Wrangham, Harvard’s Ruth Moore Professor of Biological Anthropology, emeritus, and a leading researcher of chimp behavior, worked alongside Goodall first as a student and later as a colleague after he founded the Kibale Forest Chimpanzee Project in Uganda. In this edited conversation, he discusses her wider impact as a teacher — not just of colleagues and fellow scientists, but as an exemplar of hope and empathy.
You did graduate work at the Gombe Stream in Tanzania. What was that like?
It was completely magical. I was working in Gombe, a beautiful place with semi-forested, semi-bush, semi-grassland tumbling down to a shining blue lake. Through the hills and valleys roamed about 60 chimpanzees whose behavior was still little understood. Every day was a thrill.
Jane had arrived in 1960 and did a wonderful job of tracking the chimps, finding them and observing them in the wild, before she got to know them as individuals by staying with them in a small camp area. Starting in ’69, students started following the chimps wherever they went. I arrived in 1970 and joined that group. We discovered, for example, that the chimps had a territory that they defended against their neighbors, which raised all sorts of fascinating questions.
At this time Jane was mostly in Serengeti, studying carnivores. She would come to Gombe for a week at a time, which was a joy because she wanted to know all about what was happening with the chimps. She was interested in everything.
Richard Wrangham.
File photo by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photograher.
How would you describe her as a person?
Incredibly focused. One thing not everybody appreciates is that Jane was far more than a brave young woman habituating chimps in the forest. She was a really good scientist. She combined meticulous observation with a very good sense of theory. We were very lucky that Jane was one of the first people to study chimpanzees in the wild, because she was so good at it.
Is there a single quality or achievement that you think she should be best known for?
One answer is in terms of what unites her interests, and I think that’s empathy: empathy for chimps, empathy for the people living around the chimp sites — you don’t conserve at the expense of other people — empathy for the world, empathy for creatures in the world. She had a sense of caring for everybody that she encountered.
It’s famous that she was entirely focused on chimpanzee behavior and their natural history until 1986. Her focus changed as a result of a Chicago conference called “Understanding Chimpanzees.” She heard the conservation session and realized that chimps were in trouble. She learned more about the cruel ways in which chimps were often held in captivity and from then on, it was conservation and care that mattered to her far more than research. I think it’s part of the reason she was so successful. She was dauntingly single-minded.
Her work and yours have transformed our understanding of humanity’s closest primate cousin. What do we know now that we didn’t know then?
When Jane began her work in the 1960s, there was no reason to think that any of the great apes were more significant for understanding human evolution than any other, but she discovered far more similarity in the behavior of chimpanzees and humans than between humans and what was known then about gorillas and orangutans and bonobos.
DNA research would later show that chimpanzees are more closely related to humans than they are to gorillas. Her behavioral discoveries of tool-making, tool-using, food-sharing, hunting, warlike behavior, as well as the astonishing intimacy of the mother-infant relationships — things that unite humans and chimps — anticipated the DNA revolution.
People started taking far more seriously the notion that there is an underlying biological influence on human behavior. She also helped convince scientists in general that chimps had far more similarity to us in their emotional lives, in their capacity for feeling, and in their ability to think, than any wild animal had been shown to have.
Richard W. Wrangham (left) presenting Goodall with the Roger Tory Peterson medal in 2007.
File photo by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
Goodall receives the 2003 Global Environmental Citizen Award from Eric Chivian, who was the director of the Center for Health and the Global Environment at Harvard.
Harvard file photo
Has that work changed our treatment of chimpanzees?
It’s had enormous effects. There were hundreds of chimpanzees in medical facilities in the middle of the last century that now have been released into sanctuaries, where they are nurtured relatively comfortably into their old age without being forced into tiny solitary cages and being the subject of stressful medical experiments.
Some of the coverage has characterized her as an optimist, which seems a bit surprising, given humanity’s assault on nature. Do you agree that she was?
She absolutely felt that it was important for her to be an optimist because people need hope. People need to be motivated to do good things: good for themselves, good for the planet, good for their communities, good for nature. The books that she wrote in the last two decades with “hope” in the title reflect a very conscious determination to keep hope alive. What did she really think? There’s no question the difficulties got to her, but at the same time, I think that she genuinely felt that there are reasons for hope. One of the most important sources of hope for her was the indomitable human spirit. If you can remind people that if you try hard enough you can do anything — her mother’s message — then good things will happen.
Do you share her optimism?
I am not an optimist about maintaining anything like the level of nature that we have now. I see the human species in an unstoppable takeover of the great majority of nature in the world. I think that the hope for the future of our wild places is to focus on the big places that will remain the source for as many animals and plants as we can keep alive. Kibale forest is the biggest forest in Uganda and it’s not very big. It’s only about 250 square miles.
The hope is that we can keep countries thinking that these special places are worth saving. I worry that if we spend too much time focused on saving every little forest, we’ll lose the big picture. But I can feel Jane looking over my shoulder saying, “You shouldn’t say that.” She would say, “You just passionately fight for every little forest, and maybe, out of that fight, more energy comes to save the big ones too.”
A real butterfly effectSaga that winds through centuries, continents results in newly recognized species being named in honor of Harvard biologist
Saga that winds through centuries, continents results in newly recognized species being named in honor of Harvard biologist
This is a tale of scholarly obsession. It involves a burning ship, a jungle-exploring Victorian naturalist, a Harvard biologist, and a rare butterfly.
Evolutionary biologist Andrew Berry is a scholar of Alfred Russel Wallace, a pioneering evolutionist overshadowed by Charles Darwin.
Over the years he has collected memorabilia that connect him to his scientific hero, including a rare first edition of travelogues, an autographed letter, and an original 19th-century map.
Now Berry can claim an even rarer link: A previously-unknown butterfly species collected by Wallace in the Amazon — and forgotten in museum drawers for more than 150 years — has been designated as a new species named in his honor.
“I’m absolutely thrilled, sad though it is to be so pathetically vain about having a little brown butterfly named after you,” said Berry as he sat in his book-lined office beside a colorful model of his namesake butterfly, Euptychia andrewberryi. “Seeing my excitement, you might well think, ‘Get a life, man!’”
How that tropical butterfly landed on the desk of a wry English biologist is a scientific saga that winds through centuries across Brazil, the Atlantic Ocean, London, the Harvard campus — and began for Berry with a writing assignment.
Alfred Russel Wallace.
Photo illustration by Liz Zonarich/Harvard Staff
Wallace, who was born in Wales in 1823, proposed his own theory of evolution by natural selection at the same time as Charles Darwin in 1858. For a variety of reasons, Darwin became credited as the father of evolutionary biology, and Wallace went down in history as an also-ran.
Yet Wallace was a trailblazing naturalist in his own right, credited with many other major scientific achievements. He fathered the field of biogeography and recognized a difference in fauna that distinguished Asia from Australia, New Guinea, and the Pacific islands — a boundary now called the “Wallace Line.”
In 1848, Wallace and fellow entomologist Henry Walter Bates sailed for Brazil to explore the Amazon and collect insects and other species.
Four years later, Wallace was returning to England when his ship caught fire during the Atlantic crossing, and nearly all his collections were lost. Wallace and his fellow survivors spent 10 days in lifeboats before being rescued.
Fortunately, Wallace had shipped back a few crates of specimens before the ill-fated voyage. Among them were some butterflies from Brazil.
He also spent a decade researching a monograph on the genus Euptychia, a group of butterflies from South America and Central America. Poring over collections around the globe, he found the butterflies collected by Wallace and Bates at the Museum of Natural History in London.
Andrew Berry explores the butterfly collections.
Photos by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
Life-sized model of the colorful butterfly Euptychia andrewberryi, otherwise known as “Andrew Berry’s Black-eyed Satyr” on his desk.
Butterflies in the collections at the MCZ.
“A Narrative of Travels on the Amazon and Rio Negro” by Alfred R. Wallace.
A number of those specimens were classified as the pitch brown black-eyed satyr (Euptychia picea). But Nakahara recognized that five were anatomically distinct and belonged to a new species, one previously unknown to science.
He had a good candidate for a new name — an amusing character who had given him a deeper appreciation of Wallace.
Enter Berry, who is now assistant head tutor of integrative biology and lecturer on organismic and evolutionary biology.
Berry has worn many hats as a biologist. He chased giant rats through the jungles of New Guinea, studied the genetics of fruit flies, and (bear in mind this is not a strict ranking of priorities) mentored generations of undergraduate biology students. He co-authored a book with the Nobel laureate geneticist James Watson and has written extensively about the history of science.
Near the turn of the millennium, he was fatefully assigned to write about Wallace for the London Review of Books and found himself enraptured. He went on to write numerous essays on Wallace and publish a collection of his writings.
“You can’t read Wallace and not fall in love with him, partly because he’s such a fantastic writer,” said Berry. “Then there’s the underdog piece — here’s the guy who co-discovered the theory that we trumpet, and yet he basically dropped off the map.”
“You can’t read Wallace and not fall in love with him, partly because he’s such a fantastic writer. Then there’s the underdog piece — here’s the guy who co-discovered the theory that we trumpet, and yet he basically dropped off the map.”
Andrew Berry
Nakahara felt that such a scholar deserved his own species.
When he first arrived in Cambridge, Nakahara stayed at the house of his faculty sponsor, Naomi Pierce, curator of lepidoptera in the MCZ and Sidney A. and John H. Hessel Professor of Biology, who also happens to be married to Berry.
Nakahara discovered that breakfast in the household involved generous servings of Wallace discussion.
“His contribution is bringing Wallace to people’s attention, because Wallace is this person who’s famous for not being famous,” said Nakahara. “Andrew is very good at explaining the importance of these early naturalists and Victorian biologists, and he is very engaging.”
Having a butterfly named in his honor — better yet, one collected by Wallace and Bates — makes Berry’s heart flutter. One student, Amanda Dynak ’24, made a model of his eponymous species as a gift.
“Andrew is over the moon about it,” said Pierce with a laugh. “I just think it’s a fantastic story, because Andrew is passionate about Alfred Russel Wallace, and has been for a while — in fact, long before Wallace became popular.”
But Berry cannot claim any special distinction in his house. His wife already has three species named after her, including zombie-ant fungus, a brain-hijacking parasite.
“She’s way ahead of me,” he said.
She pioneered study of hip-hop as high artHarvard renames first-of-its-kind archive after founder Marcyliena Morgan, who died recently at age 75
Marcyliena Morgan at the Hiphop Archive & Research Institute in 2019.
Harvard renames first-of-its-kind archive after founder Marcyliena Morgan, who died recently at age 75
Christy DeSmith
Harvard Staff Writer
6 min read
Today, hip-hop is the world’s most popular music genre by most commercial measures. But that wasn’t the case three decades ago when linguistic anthropologist Marcyliena H. Morgan started pitching Harvard administrators on her big idea: a first-of-its-kind hip-hop archive and academic research center.
“She wanted to give deeper legitimacy to studying this globally influential style of creative production,” recalled her husband of 28 years, Lawrence D. Bobo, W.E.B. Du Bois Professor of the Social Sciences.
Morgan, founding director of Harvard’s Hiphop Archive & Research Institute, died Sept. 28 due to complications from Alzheimer’s disease. The emerita professor of social sciences and of African and African American Studies was 75.
“She took a holistic view of the hip-hop community. When she did events, there were scholars, there were artists.”
Lawrence D. Bobo
To honor that legacy, Hopi Hoekstra, Edgerley Family Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, recently approved a new name for the gallery-like space at the Hutchins Center: the Marcyliena H. Morgan Hip Hop Archive & Research Institute.
According to Gates, word of the rechristening was relayed to Morgan a few weeks ago. “I sent a letter that was read at her bedside,” he said.
Morgan, who grew up with five sisters on Chicago’s South Side, earned advanced degrees in linguistics at the University of Essex and University of Pennsylvania. In the early 1990s while teaching a course on urban speech communities at the University of California, Los Angeles, she noticed students submitting essays on innovative patterns of speech used by Ice Cube and other West Coast rappers.
“That drew her attention to this enormous creativity with language on the one hand, and this very powerful youth culture on the other,” said Bobo, a fellow UCLA faculty member at the time. “She ended up dedicating much of the latter part of her career to studying hip-hop culture while trying to preserve and make more broadly understandable its material and cultural production.”
Morgan began amassing a vast collection of hip-hop albums, magazines, fashion, and concert posters while still at UCLA in the 1990s. As Gates recalled, her vision for a museum-quality archive was first articulated to him around 1996.
“At the time, no one could have envisioned that hip-hop would become the lingua franca of youth musical culture worldwide,” Gates observed. “The equivalent would be if W.E.B. Du Bois or Alain Locke in 1925 had thought to document the evolution of this new musical form called jazz.”
After joining Bobo at Harvard in 2002, Morgan wasted no time establishing the archive in the African and African American Studies Department. The Hiphop Archive was briefly relocated to Stanford University, where Morgan and Bobo were on the faculty from 2005 to 2007. Its current space at the Hutchins Center opened in 2008, shortly after the couple’s return to Harvard.
“There were so many people, including many artists, who visited the archive over the years and instantly burst into tears,” Bobo said. “They regarded hip-hop as central to their creative and personal development and were profoundly moved to see it treated with such respect and seriousness.”
At a symposium two years ago, colleagues, friends, and former students marked Morgan’s retirement by celebrating her approach to the discipline. Her 2009 title “The Real Hiphop: Battling for Knowledge, Power, and Respect in the LA Underground” was praised for examining innovative uses of language at a time when most scholars saw hip-hop through the lens of political science or sociology.
Morgan smiles as her husband, Lawrence D. Bobo, applauds during the 2023 celebration marking her retirement.
File photo by Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer
“These young people were writing in a form of musical poetry about their feelings, their hopes, their own wisdom, or the wisdom they had received from others,” said colleague and friend Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, Victor S. Thomas Professor of History and of African and African American Studies. “Marcy writes about it as this intergenerational dialogue. They use the art form not only to articulate the world they’re in, but the world they want in the future.”
Also applauded at the 2023 tribute were Morgan’s respect for the genre’s activist elements (such as hip-hop artists playing a lead role in promoting safe sex during the HIV/AIDS crisis) as well as the events she convened under Harvard’s imprimatur, including a 2003 symposium examining the artistic contributions of Tupac Shakur.
“She took a holistic view of the hip-hop community,” Bobo said. “When she did events, there were scholars, there were artists. There were journalists and other popular voices who routinely judged the quality of what’s produced.”
“She’s one of the first people, if not the first person, to give validation to the intellectual importance of this new form,” Higginbotham said. “You now have courses on hip-hop not just at Harvard but all over the country. You have Kendrick Lamar winning the Pulitzer Prize in 2018. You have the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History announcing a multiyear initiative to collect elements of hip-hop art and culture in 2006.”
“She’s one of the first people, if not the first person, to give validation to the intellectual importance of this new form.”
Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham
Morgan also worked at fostering personal connections. The 2023 symposium on Morgan’s career drew former students and mentees from every corner of the U.S. and as far away as Italy. “There are people of color all over this planet who have Ph.D.’s because Marcyliena Morgan mentored us and believed in us,” Bennett told the audience.
Morgan, famous for her coconut cake, grew up in a family that surrounded itself with music, cooking, ideas, and friendship. She carried on that tradition with Bobo in their Cambridge home. Lavish meals were prepared for teaching assistants. A dozen or so guests came for Thanksgiving dinner every year. Two days later came the second serving, when 40 to 50 people arrived for an annual holiday Morgan liked to call “It’s Not Over Yet.”
“Marcy, in the pit of her soul, was a community-builder, a community-maker,” Bobo said. “She saw food and talking and critical thought as enormously important ingredients for a meaningful and enjoyable life.”
Rebutting ‘myths of inequality’Former veteran legislator, economist Phil Gramm argues unequal distribution of wealth inevitable; policy to engineer level playing field is mistake
Photos by Veasey Conway/Harvard Staff Photographer
Christina Pazzanese
Harvard Staff Writer
4 min read
Former veteran legislator, economist Phil Gramm argues unequal distribution of wealth inevitable; policy to engineer level playing field is mistake
There’s nothing inherently wrong with unequal distribution of income or wealth in the nation, according to Phil Gramm, former veteran U.S. legislator and economist.
The problems arise when the federal government tries to engineer a level playing field, whether through blunt corporate anti-trust regulations or through assistance programs for the poor, said the Texas Republican, who spent about three terms each in the House and Senate, during a talk last Tuesday at Harvard Kennedy School.
“People have different aptitudes and interests, different levels of energy, and inequality is a natural occurrence of competition. I’m not upset by inequality,” Gramm told Harvard economist Larry Summers during a conversation about economic policy.
The two worked together in the late 1990s when Gramm chaired the Senate Banking Committee and Summers was named U.S. Treasury secretary by then-President Bill Clinton.
Gramm, who holds a Ph.D. from the University of Georgia and taught at Texas A&M, discussed what he called “myths” about key periods in U.S. economic history, from the Industrial Revolution to the 2008-2009 financial crisis, the subject of his 2022 book, “The Myth of American Inequality: How Government Biases Policy Debate.”
The debate over income and wealth inequality has been shaped by progressive critics, such as French economist Thomas Piketty, who often overstate the gap between rich and poor by only considering earned income and ignoring the value of benefits most lower-income individuals receive from the government, like Medicaid or food stamps, Gramm argued.
“So, when you see that the poverty family has an income of $29,000, that’s not counting a refundable tax credit because they don’t take taxes into account; that’s not counting food stamps, where you get a debit card and you go the grocery store; that’s not counting rent subsidies, not counting Medicaid,” Gramm said. “If you count all those things, the ratio of the top quintile to the bottom is not 16, 17 to 1, but 4 to 1.”
Summers, the Charles W. Eliot University Professor and the Frank and Denie Weil Director of the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government at HKS, agreed that many official statistics underestimate the income of lower-income people so they appear in worse shape than they actually are, which some then use as the basis for an argument for more assistance programs.
Even when those programs successfully reduce the number of poor people, government data often doesn’t reflect that, he added.
Theda Skocpol, Ph.D. ’75, Victor S. Thomas Professor of Government and Sociology, pushed back on Gramm’s assertion.
Theda Skocpol.
Even if what he says is accurate, she said, “Inequalities of wealth and income have still skyrocketed to an extraordinary degree since the late 1970s.”
The big winners during the Industrial Revolution, tycoons such as Andrew Carnegie, greatly benefited from federal subsidies, Skocpol said.
“A lot of those fortunes were made out of government contracts given through patronage capitalism during and after the Civil War,” a situation that is again rampant today to “an extraordinary degree,” she said.
“A lot of the fortunes that are being made by the people who are attending those dinners in the White House are being made through favored government contracts, and we can’t be sure that’s going to maximize efficiency at all, let alone opportunity to innovate in a vibrant capitalist economy.”
Gramm also addressed the decision by the Trump administration to have the government take equity stakes in private companies like Intel. He said he adamantly opposed the practice because of the negative potentialramifications to the economy.
“It’s ripe for corruption and special treatment, and again you’ve got to look when you start this kind of thing, even if your intentions are good and even if your first selectees are good, you got to accept the fact that it’s going to be” done repeatedly with no end in sight, he said.
Gramm argued for a simpler tax system with fewer deductions and lower rates as part of a debate on the merits of taxing income right away while allowing capital gains to be shielded until assets are sold.
The veteran lawmaker was asked whether the record wealth of Silicon Valley tech entrepreneurs like Elon Musk, who has amassed a nearly $1 trillion fortune, ought to be somehow regulated.
He demurred, saying Musk created that $1 trillion in value for shareholders, and his products provide benefit to consumers.
“He did more good making it than he’ll ever do giving it away,” he said.
The fear: Wholesale cheating with AI at work, school. The reality: It’s complicated.ChatGPT usage appears ‘more wholesome and practical’ than researchers expected
The fear: Wholesale cheating with AI at work, school. The reality: It’s complicated.
ChatGPT usage appears ‘more wholesome and practical’ than researchers expected
Christy DeSmith
Harvard Staff Writer
7 min read
By and large, it appears school and work assignments are not being outsourced entirely to ChatGPT. A new working paper by David Deming, Danoff Dean of Harvard College, uncovers the more mundane realities of people’s AI habits.
“It’s more wholesome and practical than I expected,” said Deming, a labor economist who also serves as Harvard Kennedy School’s Isabelle and Scott Black Professor of Political Economy. “I think that’s a good story. But it’s probably a disappointment if you think this thing is taking over the world. It’s also not a very good story for those predicting huge productivity gains.”
Deming’s large-scale study, co-authored with in-house economists at OpenAI, explores both the who and the how of ChatGPT usage worldwide. Key findings show rapid uptake has eased or even erased demographic gaps related to geography and gender. A separate set of analyses drew on a huge sample of anonymized messages to more accurately situate the technology’s everyday role as a researcher and gut-check.
“People have found that it’s great to have an assistant, an adviser, and a guide,” Deming said. “Sure, you can use it to automate things, but the prompting is important, and you really have to go back and forth with it. Whereas there’s very low friction in just asking it for advice or feedback.”
“People have found that it’s great to have an assistant, an adviser, and a guide.”
File photo by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
Deming, who remains bullish on college graduates’ career prospects in the 21st century, recently published two high-profile inquiries into AI adoption and labor market disruptions. He was presenting his research last spring at the Bay Area headquarters of OpenAI, the artificial intelligence company that developed ChatGPT, when Ronnie Chatterjee, the firm’s chief economist, proposed partnering on a third study based on internal data.
This was before Deming was announced as dean of Harvard College.
“A couple months into the project, I said to the team, ‘I decided to take on this new job. But don’t worry. I’m still committed to the paper,’” he recalled with a laugh.
Their findings show ChatGPT outpacing Google’s historic growth. As Deming noted in a recent Substack, it took Google eight years to reach 1 billion daily messages following its public debut in 1999. ChatGPT, released in November 2022, reached that milestone in less than two years.
As of July 2025, they find approximately 10 percent of the global adult population is using the technology, with adults ages 18 to 25 responsible for nearly half of the platform’s 2.6 billion daily messages.
“I knew young people would be heavier users,” offered Deming, noting the analysis excluded minors. “But the scale is surprising. It suggests this generation will be truly AI native.”
Deming et al. wondered whether the well-documented gender gap in ChatGPT adoption rates were closing with the product’s growth. They approached the question by studying whether users had traditionally masculine or feminine names, according to a variety of data sets including the Social Security Administration’s annual ranking of popular baby names for boys and girls.
In early 2023, just months after the ChatGPT product launch, the economists found roughly 80 percent of weekly active users had traditionally male names. As of July 2025, users with traditionally female names constituted just over half of all users.
“That crossover happened in the last few months,” Deming noted.
Also surprising was the fact that people in middle-income countries, including South Korea and Chile, are now adopting the technology faster than those in the wealthiest economies.
“There’s no longer a big difference in usage between people in Brazil and the U.S.,” Deming said.
“I knew young people would be heavier users. But the scale is surprising. It suggests this generation will be truly AI native.”
Other findings concern how people are using the technology and how usage varies across demographics. This part of the research, completed with careful attention to protecting user privacy, meant developing a taxonomy for various kinds of ChatGPT prompts.
The job of categorizing nearly 1 million messages, sent between May 2024 and June 2025, ultimately fell to — what else? — ChatGPT-5.
“We asked the large language model whether each message was work-related — or whether it was asking for tutoring or teaching, whether it was asking about what products to buy, whether it was asking for personal advice,” Deming explained.
As of June 2024, the data show an even split between work and personal messages. A year later, personal usage had far outpaced anything work-related — especially among young adults — and accounted for nearly three-quarters of all messages sent via ChatGPT’s consumer plans.
To verify the accuracy of this research method, results were compared with classifications made by humans. Additional tests showed the technology accurately categorizing submissions drawn from WildChat, a public database of voluntarily submitted ChatGPT messages.
Roughly 80 percent of messages fell into three categories. Those categorized as “seeking information” grew from 14 to 24 percent between July 2024 and July 2025.
“This is basically the same thing as Google search,” Deming said. “But it’s maybe a little bit easier since you don’t need to scroll through a bunch of websites. It just gives you the answer.”
“The way people are using it is so general that it applies to every job. It makes me even more skeptical of the narrative that AI is replacing entry-level positions.”
Another popular category called “practical guidance” held steady, totaling roughly 29 percent of messages over the same period.
“These messages are a little more customized,” Deming explained. “It could be something like: ‘I’m a 65-year-old who hurt my left hamstring. Give me some stretches to do.’
“And if you don’t like the answer,” he added, “you can just say so. You’re having a conversation with the chatbot that is adaptive to your request. That’s something a traditional web search just can’t do.”
“Writing,” the top use for work-related messages, fell from 36 to 24 percent of messages over the period studied.
“Actually, most of the ‘writing’ usage isn’t just writing,” Deming clarified. “It’s summarizing documents, critiquing op-eds, cutting 1,000 words down to 800, or translating a text into Farsi.”
Work-related messages, far more common with educated users in highly paid professions, were subjected to additional scrutiny. These inputs were specifically mapped to work activities listed in the U.S. Department of Labor-sponsored Occupational Information Network (O*NET) database, with “documenting/recording information” and “making decisions and solving problems” emerging as top messaging categories by users in nearly every occupation.
As Deming tells it, white-collar professionals across industries are applying ChatGPT to a similar set of tasks.
“If you look at educators, the top use case isn’t a category called ‘training and teaching others,’” he said. “It’s ‘documenting/recording information.’ And for sales occupations, the top task isn’t ‘selling or influencing others.’ It’s ‘making decisions and solving problems.’
“The way people are using it is so general that it applies to every job,” concluded Deming, who’s working with a different set of colleagues to launch an AI tracker, with regular servings of data-backed insights on usage and labor market impacts in the U.S. “It makes me even more skeptical of the narrative that AI is replacing entry-level positions.”
U.S. needs to keep its friends closer, Pence saysFirst-term Trump VP: ‘If America isn’t leading the free world, the free world is not being led.’
First-term Trump VP: ‘If America isn’t leading the free world, the free world is not being led.’
Alvin Powell
Harvard Staff Writer
4 min read
Former Vice President Mike Pence said Tuesday that signs of diminished U.S. support for longtime allies have left him worried about conflict and strife akin to one of the deadliest eras in world history.
“I think we’re living in a very perilous time where America needs to be strong, we need to be ready, we need to stand with our allies, and we need to make it clear to enemies of freedom that — as President Kennedy said — we will bear any burden, pay any price to ensure the survival of liberty,” Pence said. “We stay strong, we stay unwavering, make it clear to people that we’re going to defend our interests and our allies in the world, and we got a shot at a peaceful future. Failing that, I think the second half of the 21st century could look a whole lot more like the first half of the 20th century.”
Pence spoke at the Kennedy School during an event hosted by the Institute of Politics and moderated by Archon Fung, director of the Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation. It came months after Pence was awarded the Profile in Courage Award by the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation in Boston for his role certifying the 2020 election results as rioters surrounded the U.S. Capitol.
The U.S. is irreplaceable on the world stage because there’s no other allied nation that other countries will follow, Pence said, linking his own recent run for president to his sense that Donald Trump and others in the GOP were stepping back from global leadership.
“What drew me into my brief but memorable campaign back in 2023 was that I saw my old running mate and many in our party departing from those core ideals and principles,” Pence said. “If America isn’t leading the free world, the free world is not being led. There is no B team, no backup country that steps into that gap.”
Specifically, Pence said that the U.S. should help put Ukraine in a better position to defeat Russia. Otherwise, he said, the risk of a third world war will rise.
“Anyone who thinks yielding to a rapacious dictator avoids World War III needs to study World War II,” Pence said. “In my judgment, Vladimir Putin won’t stop until he’s stopped.”
Pence didn’t break with the current administration completely. He cited his support for lower taxes. He cast doubt on global warming prescriptions and insisted that climate solutions come from free market, rather than regulatory, approaches. He also voiced support for the Supreme Court’s 2024 decision overturning the Chevron doctrine, which had given regulators a powerful voice in interpreting and filling in gaps in laws passed by Congress.
Pence said that his Christian faith has been a powerful motivator for him in public life and that he believes that democracy requires that the people share a common moral order. He also affirmed the First Amendment’s religious freedom clauses.
He traced to his faith his belief that civility in politics is not just a courtesy to opponents, but an important feature that allows people to meet across differences.
“Democracy depends on heavy doses of civility,” he said. “When we’re civil with one another, even when we disagree, we have the opportunity to find common cause, not compromising principles or core values, but actually finding ways to work together to advance the country.”
Fung thanked Pence for his actions on Jan. 6, 2021, when Pence refused to bow to pressure from President Trump and the protesters invading the Capitol as Congress gathered to certify Joe Biden’s election victory. He also asked the former vice president about his faith in the durability of U.S. institutions.
Recalling Jan. 6, Pence said, “Many around the world were watching and I think they saw the resilience of our institutions and the strength of our institutions.”
He added: “I have confidence in the days ahead that Republicans and Democrats will hew to those roots and to that duty.”
‘Vibes or hunches’ don’t help win electionsPolitical analytics conference convenes experts on voter trends, election forecasting, behavioral research
Ryan D. Enos (left) moderates a talk with North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis.
Photos by Jodi Hilton
Christy DeSmith
Harvard Staff Writer
4 min read
Political analytics conference convenes experts on voter trends, election forecasting, behavioral research
How should politicians proceed when gut instinct clashes with data analytics?
“You go with the analytics,” said North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis.
The second-term Republican was on campus last week to help kick off Political Analytics 2025. Organized by the Center for American Political Studies, the one-day conference convened top thinkers on voter trends, election forecasting, and behavioral research. Tillis, a former executive with PricewaterhouseCoopers and IBM, credited an opinion poll with vaulting his legislative career.
He remembered facing a supposedly indominable incumbent in the 2006 Republican primary for a seat in the North Carolina House of Representatives. “I engaged someone to do a poll to determine whether or not the guy could be beaten — where his vulnerability was,” Tillis said. “We went from going after a guy who was supposedly unbeatable to beating him by a two-to-one margin.”
In the audience were pollsters, consultants, and political scientists with expertise in big data. “Politics deserves every bit of sophistication we can bring to it,” said host Ryan D. Enos, a professor of government and director of the Center for American Political Studies. “We can’t leave it to vibes or hunches any more than we can leave medicine to those things.”
Panelists referred to challenges in today’s rapidly changing political environment, including diminished confidence in institutions and a splintering information ecosystem. “We realize even more the need for an analytical approach to politics,” Enos said. “This is why we revived the Harvard Political Analytics Conference after a seven-year hiatus.”
“We realize even more the need for an analytical approach to politics.”
Ryan D. Enos
In one panel, seasoned strategists shared findings from research and field work. David Shor, a data scientist and consultant supporting candidates on the left, pushed back against those who argue Democrats need to run a white man in the next presidential election, noting that his metrics show women candidates often outperform men. Data and behavioral scientist Matt Oczkowski, formerly of Cambridge Analytica, predicted something of a “civil war” on the right, as establishment Republicans fight to win back the party’s soul.
Enos and his co-organizers also assembled a panel to discuss the country’s youngest voters. Rachel Janfaza ’20, founder of the qualitative research firm The Up and Up, outlined her theory of “two Gen Zs,” separated by the pandemic’s disruption of K-12 education. Also highlighted were concerns about AI’s job market impacts and an emerging gender divide on marriage and children.
Multiple panelists grappled with the state of political polling, with support for President Trump underestimated in three consecutive cycles. They discussed whether artificial intelligence could help pollsters reach more independent and Republican voters or if interviewers should try doubling down on in-person methods.
Graduate student Zachary Donnini (left) and panelists Anthony Salvanto, Steve Kornacki, and Harry Enten.
Polling before last year’s general election was still more accurate than historic averages, noted CNN chief data analyst Harry Enten. “The problem is,” he said, “we have had more elections in a row, at least in the popular vote, that were determined by single digits than at any point since we first started recording the popular vote in 1824.”
Presented as a possible counterweight were predictions markets, or online platforms where users can wager on the outcomes of future events. Jaron Zhou ’22 of the predictions market Kalshi noted traders on his site decisively split for President Trump last fall. The Q&A session saw conference-goers raising concerns, including the danger of further eroding trust in noncommercial, nonpartisan political polls.
The Hispanic vote proved another lightning rod, with multiple panelists drawing on the 2024 election for evidence of historic realignment. “I wouldn’t be surprised if in 2026, just because of the general nature of midterm elections, you see a lot of the gains Republicans made with Hispanic voters slide back,” said NBC News chief data analyst Steve Kornacki.
But he likened it to the 1986 midterms, when Democrats flipped Senate seats in Alabama, Georgia, and North Carolina. It hardly heralded the party’s resurgence in the South, Kornacki recalled. “It was a blip.”
He suggested factors including race, gender, and age were already driving more lasting change. “Trends that we’ve seen with white voters are starting to take hold among non-white voters,” Kornacki said, “but specifically, and I think most dramatically and most immediately, with Hispanic voters.”
A hopeful dystopia, simple recipe, and ‘circuitous reunion’Professor of Afro-Latin American history recommends sights, tastes, and sounds of Argentina
Paulina Alberto is a Professor of African and African American Studies and of History.
A TV show
“El Eternauta”
I’m not usually a fan of sci-fi, but this dystopian show about an alien invasion set in Buenos Aires, Argentina, transcends the genre. To Argentines (like me) who grew up seeing U.S. cities devastated by the magic of Hollywood, it’s a shocking thrill to see our capital city blanketed in the eerie, poisonous snow that announces the invasion. But the show’s message is hopeful: No one gets through this alone. An adaptation of a series of anti-authoritarian graphic novels first published in 1957, today its signature gas masks and motto of solidarity are taken up by Argentine scholars, scientists, and researchers defending their institutions from government attacks.
A recipe
Simple salads
When produce is bountiful (especially after unloading a farm share into our refrigerator), I like to return to the salads I grew up with. Go to a traditional neighborhood restaurant or grill in Buenos Aires and you’ll find a long list of salads with just one vegetable: carrot, tomato, beet, fennel, watercress, turnip, and so on. My father’s favorites were celery or onion (slice either of these paper-thin and soak in wine vinegar before adding plenty of salt and oil). Make at least four or five of these one-veg salads. They inevitably mingle on your plate, but each flavor shines in a way an “everything” salad just can’t replicate.
A song
“Tú ve” by Kevin Johansen and Natalia Lafourcade
This is a twofer — like asking the genie for one more wish: “Tú ve,” by two of my favorite recording artists, Kevin Johansen (Argentina) and Natalia Lafourcade (Mexico). It’s a song (built on a play on words) about separations, missed encounters, and circuitous reunion. Johansen and his band, La Nada, are eclectic and creative, playfully remixing Argentina’s pop, rock, and folklore traditions with genres and collaborators from across the Americas. Lafourcade makes luminous indie music grounded in the traditional styles of Mexico and especially her native Veracruz. You don’t need to understand Spanish to love their music.
— As told to Sy Boles/Harvard Staff Writer
Live fast, die young, inspire ShakespeareStephen Greenblatt finds a tragic strain in the life and work of Christopher Marlowe
Stephen Greenblatt finds a tragic strain in the life and work of Christopher Marlowe
Many years ago, Stephen Greenblatt tried to convince the writing team behind “Shakespeare in Love” that they were chasing the wrong Renaissance playwright — that the life of Christopher Marlowe, Shakespeare’s contemporary and rival, would make a better movie.
Decades later, Greenblatt has made his case with “Dark Renaissance,” a literary history of the knowns and unknowns of the life of Marlowe, killed at 29.
The book is not just a thrilling read — full of transgression and espionage — but also an argument for Marlowe’s literary significance: as much as anyone the inventor of the Elizabethan theater that Shakespeare would soon perfect, and for the tragic grandeur woven through his work, his own meteoric rise and squalid, murky death.
In an edited interview with the Gazette, Greenblatt, Cogan University Professor of the Humanities, explains what drew him irresistibly to Marlowe, and what Marlowe’s story can tell our time.
It’s important to set the scene. Your book offers a vivid picture of England in the 1560s and 1570s, when Marlowe — and Shakespeare — came of age. It is frankly a frightening place, with religious conflict between Protestants and Catholics, but also Protestants and more extreme Protestants. And it’s marked by violence, betrayal, and paranoia.
Yes. Society had split into warring parties, and the parties hated each other — it wasn’t just that they didn’t agree. People were getting killed. It must have been extremely difficult even to sit down with a big family at Christmas. You’d have to agree not to talk about a whole lot of issues.
And in addition to the internal divisions, which were tremendous, there were foreign armies threatening. The Spanish armada would sail in 1588, and Catholic powers on the continent were recruiting what we might call “terrorists”: training people to kill the queen.
And that atmosphere weighed on the culture. For years the English theater was either extremely crude or sort of arid and moralizing.
Well, yes: You just had all of these regime changes — Henry VIII; his Catholic daughter, Mary; her Protestant sister, Elizabeth — each of which was accompanied by executions. Many people understandably decided to keep their heads down.
You have to think of it as a society rather like contemporary Iran, where there is no shared public space, where — if you are the kind of person inclined to speak out, to say things that the authorities don’t approve of — you can get in tremendous trouble.
Marlowe seems to have been that kind of person. Even in his published work, there are challenges to the divine right of kings, as in “Tamburlaine,” or to God, as in “Faustus,” along with persistent elements of gore, sadism, eroticism.
Yes. We don’t just notice now, in 2025, that these are transgressive plays — he was noticed for it, and attacked for it, immediately in his own time.
And I think Marlowe would be interesting even if he was just a kind of troublemaker, or a wild freethinker in a time when that was dangerous. But what makes his story so compelling is that he was also an incredible genius. He wrote arguably the most beloved love poem of his time — “Come live with me and be my love,” everyone was singing it. Or “Hero and Leander,” a great, sexy poem. And theatrical blank verse: In “Tamburlaine,” Marlowe basically invented this astonishing new medium.
The meter, the form used by Shakespeare — who then eclipses him.
Who eclipses everyone. Shakespeare was the far greater artist, ultimately. People at the time understood that it was horrible to be imitated by Shakespeare: He would watch, absorb, digest, transform, and do what you do even better. Robert Greene, another contemporary writer, said of him, “This is an upstart Crow, beautified with our feathers.” But Shakespeare learned a ton from Marlowe — really a ton.
“People at the time understood that it was horrible to be imitated by Shakespeare: He would watch, absorb, digest, transform, and do what you do even better.”
The book is worth reading if only to see that Shakespeare didn’t spring out of nowhere: how he arose along with Thomas Kyd and Marlowe, in dialogue and competition with them. You say “Tamburlaine,” Marlowe’s first big success, sets the stage. It imagines this conqueror who comes from nothing and rolls over the kings of Asia Minor, a man who is brutal and godless and ambitious. And people loved it — Marlowe had to hurriedly write a second part.
It was just unlike anything that had come before. And that play helped get going, basically, the first mass entertainment industry in the modern world. Not the elegant private theaters that still existed in Italy, like in Vicenza, but this crazy thing — that brought together people who were exquisitely cultivated with pickpockets and whores, all in the same space together. Marlowe was the first person to figure that out.
This book is a natural companion to “Will in the World,” your 2004 narrative of Shakespeare’s creative life. Marlowe comes to seem like his dark twin.
I do see him that way. They were exact contemporaries. They came from similar backgrounds: both provincials, Marlowe the son of a cobbler, Shakespeare the son of a glovemaker. Their paths were different, but they both found their way to London, and to theater, at the same time.
For years, many scholars believed it possible that they never met each other. That always seemed to me wildly unlikely. Today, most scholars believe that in fact the two collaborated on plays, including the three parts of “Henry VI” — that they were in a writers’ room together.
You have a scene imagining what it was like in that room, and it’s sort of funny. Shakespeare ends up seeming careerist, cagey, sort of “square” next to Marlowe, who was a Cambridge graduate, a reputed atheist, an acquaintance to the biggest names in his world, and who died violently at just 29. He was also, notoriously, some kind of a spy for the Elizabethan regime — the source of much speculation.
Yes. We know that the Privy Council — really the most important people in the country — intervened to get Marlowe his master’s degree from Cambridge when it was being withheld. And what they said was that he “had done her Majesty good service and deserved to be rewarded.”
This is a world in which people are listening to each other, drawing out people’s secrets and reporting them to the authorities. I’m careful not to say what exactly Marlowe did, because I don’t know exactly what he did. We can only speculate, from his being a simple courier to something more sinister. But that “good service” letter — it’s not as if there are 500 more such letters around. I can’t think of another one. So I tend to think he wasn’t just a courier.
A 1585 portrait thought to be of Christopher Marlowe.
Wikimedia Commons
Let’s talk about his mysterious death. After a long day with some very unseemly associates, Marlowe was fatally stabbed in the eye, age 29, in 1593. His tablemates tell the authorities that it was a fight about the “recknynge” — the bill. You’re not convinced.
It’s just strange. Among the three people he was with was Robert Poley, a kind of career spy and one of the scariest people you could ever bump up against in the late 16th century. He got his hands in very bloody and sinister things, including the entrapment of Mary, Queen of Scots — though not just that.
And then we learn that a full account of the terrible, heretical things Marlowe was supposedly saying was copied and given to the queen. That’s unusual: She didn’t look at every accusation. And then it’s reported that the queen’s response was to “prosecute it to the full.” As usual, it’s murky — “prosecute it to the full” doesn’t mean “stab Marlowe to death in an inn.” But someone could easily have interpreted it as that kind of official encouragement.
Let’s close on that point. Christopher Marlowe, it seems to me, anticipates a familiar artistic type: the live-fast-die-young sort. If he had a kind of death wish, you could argue he almost wrote it into his greatest play, “Faustus,” about the doctor’s famous deal with the devil. In this version, Faustus gives up his soul for 24 years of boundless power.
Yes. There’s something intensely personal about Marlowe’s representation of Dr. Faustus. And it’s odd: In the deal, it isn’t the devil who proposes the 24 years. Faustus comes up with that. It’s as if some part of Marlowe was interested in the idea of knowing your end was not so far off.
So maybe Marlowe knew he couldn’t last forever. He ends up being a very moving character, given the little we know about him — and acknowledging that Shakespeare sort of left him in his dust.
Yes. And we don’t know what Marlowe might have become. If Shakespeare had died at 29, we’d have, what? “Two Gentlemen of Verona,” the Henry VI plays, and “Titus Andronicus”? It’s just not that interesting a career. Nearly all of his great work lay ahead of him, at that age.
And Shakespeare appeared to be as conscious of Marlowe as any contemporary writer. Marlowe was the only one he quoted directly in one of his plays. He watched Marlowe write “Edward II”; he wrote “Richard II.” Marlowe wrote “The Jew of Malta”; Shakespeare wrote “The Merchant of Venice.” Marlowe wrote “Tamburlaine” and he wrote “Titus Andronicus” — as if to say, “You want blood, I’ll give you blood!”
And then you’re clear about the trail Marlowe helped blaze, to popularize the theater, blend high and low sensibilities, write poetry for the stage, and maybe how to smuggle cultural critique into popular entertainment.
Yeah. Marlowe seemed to see a kind of wall built around him, in his time. He wanted to get out but there was no door, so he just took this hammer and smashed a hole in the wall — I’m putting it crudely. And then Shakespeare basically walked over his dead body, through the hole that he had made.
Corporatization of healthcare gets too much of a bad rap, analyst saysHealthcare analyst says outside investment can boost innovation, growth, care, but profit needs to be aligned with patient outcomes
Corporatization of healthcare gets too much of a bad rap, analyst says
For-profits, private equity can boost innovation, growth, care, according to co-author of new paper. But gains need to be aligned with patient outcomes.
This growing trend in the U.S. is known as corporatization. Investors supply much-needed funding to pharmaceutical and biomedical companies, healthcare institutions, and physicians to help pay for drug development, meet escalating expenses, and increase efficiency and scale. But too often, critics say, the push for profit ends up leaving patients with reduced quality and choice, and ever-surging costs.
In a new paper in the New England Journal of Medicine, co-author Amitabh Chandra argues private investment in the healthcare system fills a critical need that others, like the federal government and nonprofits, simply cannot.
In this edited conversation, Chandra, who is director of the Malcolm Wiener Center for Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School and the Henry and Allison McCance Family Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School, said contrary to popular opinion, profit-seeking in healthcare doesn’t necessarily mean that patients will be worse off.
What is corporatization?
Corporatization is essentially a deal between a medical organization and investors. The organization receives capital that can be used for new technologies, upgraded facilities, research, or competitive salaries.
In return, investors expect a share of the profits. The share might be small or large — 1 percent, 10 percent, or even 50 percent — depending on the terms of the agreement. At its core, corporatization “unlocks” money for growth, but it does so in a way that prioritizes profits, since investors can always move their funds elsewhere if returns are lacking
You say private investment in healthcare isn’t necessarily bad. What are some of the benefits besides an infusion of cash?
The deal between an investor and a medical organization is voluntary, so it clearly benefits those two parties. But the real question is whether it benefits society — and that’s not always obvious.
The key measure is what happens to patient outcomes when corporatization occurs. In some areas, such as nursing homes, the record is poor. Here, some private equity firm owners may cut staffing and reduce quality to boost profits, which has been linked to higher patient mortality.
“The key measure is what happens to patient outcomes when corporatization occurs.”
But in other areas, corporatization has delivered real benefits. In vitro fertilization (IVF) is one example. Because IVF is capital-intensive, larger corporate networks can use scale, data, and investment in technology to improve success rates. Patients benefit because quality is measurable (pregnancy rates), and clinics compete directly on outcomes and price.
Similarly, in the biopharmaceutical industry, private investment has been indispensable for funding the huge costs of drug development, enabling the creation of treatments that otherwise wouldn’t exist.
So, the benefits of corporatization beyond just “more money” depend on whether the investment is used to expand scale, improve processes, or foster innovation in ways that actually improve patient outcomes.
Because healthcare and scientific R&D are so expensive, isn’t tension between market incentives and health outcomes, between patients and profits, inevitable?
I don’t think so. The “inevitable tension” view assumes that anytime profits are involved, patients’ well-being is compromised. But imagine a world without profits — would patients automatically be better off? The answer is no.
Much of healthcare depends on improving quality and driving innovation: treating a heart attack patient better this year than last, developing new medicines, or adopting better technologies. All of that requires capital, and profits are what attract that capital.
It’s true that people worry — often rightly — about the excesses of for-profit entities. But from that, some conclude that the very presence of profit must harm patients. That’s a mistake.
Even the solo physician in private practice is seeking profit, and without profit it will shutter. So it’s naïve to say that corporations making profits are bad, but individuals making profits is fine.
The real challenge isn’t profit itself, but how well we align profits with value for patients. In sectors like IVF or biopharmaceuticals, profits and patient outcomes can reinforce each other. In others, like nursing homes, misaligned incentives can lead to harm.
In your view, why has corporatization been helpful in some sectors but not in others, like nursing homes?
A big part of the answer is how observable quality is. Take IVF clinics: Their promise is straightforward — fertility. Patients can easily see whether treatment leads to pregnancy, and clinics compete directly on success rates and cost.
Pharmaceuticals are more complex, but here quality is backed up by regulation. Patients may not be able to evaluate a drug on their own, but FDA approval signals that it is safe and effective, and physicians act as trusted intermediaries.
That combination of regulation and professional oversight helps align profits with patient outcomes, which is why corporatization has supported innovation in pharma.
“That combination of regulation and professional oversight helps align profits with patient outcomes, which is why corporatization has supported innovation in pharma.”
By contrast, nursing homes lack clear, trusted quality measures. Families struggle to assess the quality of day-to-day care, and regulators are relatively weak. This creates space for profit-driven owners — especially private equity firms — to cut staffing and reduce quality, even in ways that increase patient mortality.
Without reliable measures or enforcement, corporatization in this sector tends to harm rather than help patients.
Isn’t the federal government better-suited than private equity to fund this kind of work, especially research and development, which often requires a huge investment over a long period of time with no guarantee that a product is going to work, get approved by regulators, or be successful in a crowded marketplace?
No. Governments, including the U.S., have shown themselves to be poor at sustaining long-term investments.
The NIH budget is about $35 billion, which is crucial for supporting basic science, but it’s small compared to what’s needed. By contrast, the pharmaceutical industry invests around $275 billion globally each year in R&D. That scale of spending is far beyond what governments, nonprofits and foundations are willing or able to sustain.
Without private capital the massive, high-risk clinical trials and product development that bring new treatments to patients simply wouldn’t happen
Government funding also comes with bureaucratic hurdles, shifting priorities, and budgetary uncertainty — not a good recipe for the steady, long-term investment required for drug development. Where government plays an essential role is in early-stage research, creating the scientific foundation.
Here too, as the current stoppage of NIH grants illustrates, it struggles to provide smooth funding, which is a prerequisite for producing great science. To be clear, it’s not just the U.S. government that is bad at long-term spending on science. The governments of many rich countries have a substantially worse record.
Why is that happening?
It’s ultimately a choice. Ideally, government should spend more because the benefits of basic science research accrue to society as a whole. Take Alzheimer’s disease: Developing a truly transformational treatment may take 30, 40, even 50 years. That kind of research horizon isn’t attractive to private investors, so government has to play a larger role in financing the early-stage science.
And in fact, despite its shortcomings, the U.S. government is the world’s largest funder of basic biomedical research. The problem is that governments everywhere face structural limits: They are not well-suited for long-term commitments that don’t yield visible benefits to voters in the short run. Other countries often free-ride on U.S. investments, making the challenge even greater.
What steps can be taken to reap the benefits of for-profit investment while minimizing some of the negative outcomes that can arise from a desire to find profit?
Profit-seeking is not the problem itself. Even nonprofits generate profits; they just don’t pay taxes on them. A system without profits wouldn’t automatically make patients better off; in fact, it would shrink the scale of care and stifle innovation. The real challenge is ensuring that profits are aligned with value for patients.
“The real challenge is ensuring that profits are aligned with value for patients.”
The most important step is to strengthen regulation. Right now, regulators in healthcare are under-resourced and often unable to oversee complex deals or prevent abuses. A well-resourced and independent regulator is critical to making corporatization work well. The FDA is a good example: It provides trusted, science-based approval of drugs, which helps align corporate incentives with patient outcomes.
We need similar capacity elsewhere in healthcare — regulators at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the Federal Trade Commission, and the Department of Justice that are insulated from political interference and independent of the industries they oversee.
With better-quality measurement, enforcement of antitrust rules, and the authority to stop or unwind deals that don’t generate value for society, regulation can help ensure that corporate investment expands access, improves quality, and drives innovation without sacrificing patient well-being.
Steve McQueen could lecture you, but he’s got other plans‘I think the audience needs more, and I feel I need to give more,’ says award-winning filmmaker — presenter of this year’s Norton talks
Steve McQueen could lecture you, but he’s got other plans
While at Harvard, Norton lecturer Steve McQueen joined undergrads at ArtsBites, a luncheon and discussion series at the Office for the Arts.
Photos by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
Eileen O’Grady
Harvard Staff Writer
4 min read
‘I think the audience needs more, and I feel I need to give more,’ says award-winning filmmaker — presenter of this year’s Norton talks
For Steve McQueen, live performance generates a force that no podium lecture can match.
It’s a conviction that shapes the Norton Lectures he is delivering this fall, in a series titled “Pulse,” featuring film, musical performances, and dialogue.
“There’s a certain kind of energy that could be produced by a performative idea of communication, and that’s what I’m interested in,” said the Academy Award-winning director of “12 Years a Slave.” “I’m not the kind of person who stands for an hour reading from a piece of paper. I think the audience needs more, and I feel I need to give more. I also feel the dialogue — the back-and-forth clash of two stones making a fire — could be thought-provoking for the audience as well as the participants.”
McQueen is recognized internationally for producing work that explores painful and challenging histories and exposes the fragility of the human condition. He directed the feature films “Blitz” (2024) and “Hunger” (2008), as well as the documentaries “Uprising” (2021) and “Occupied City” (2023).
The first of McQueen’s six Norton Lectures, delivered Tuesday, centered on the FBI files of legendary Black singer, actor, and political activist Paul Robeson. McQueen’s 2012-2022 video work “End Credits,” features a continuous projection of digitally scanned files from thousands of highly redacted, declassified documents kept on Robeson and his wife, Eslanda Goode Robeson, for most of the singer’s life, greatly damaging his career as a performer.
McQueen with students.
The lecture featured four performers reading sections from Robeson’s FBI files as visuals from the film were projected behind them. Afterward, McQueen and Dia Art Foundation curator Donna De Salvo spoke with Henry Louis Gates Jr., Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and director of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research. In an interview with the Gazette, McQueen said that the first lecture was intended to reflect a sense of “urgency.”
“Small Axe,” the second lecture, scheduled for Oct. 21, centers on McQueen’s film anthology by the same name. The five films depict the experiences of West Indian immigrants in London from the 1960s to the 1980s, with five unique stories rooted in the Black British experience during a period of social and political upheaval. The films are being screened at the Harvard Film Archive ahead of the lecture.
“It’s one of those situations where people come together to combat a certain kind of power,” McQueen said. “It is within this proverb: ‘If you are the big tree, we are the small axe.’ If we’re working together, we can actually get things done.”
The third lecture, “Bass,” centers on an immersive installation that McQueen created in 2024. The work, inspired in part by the Middle Passage and the trans-Atlantic journey of enslaved people, features a combination of music focused on the low-end frequency of the double bass, with colored lights.
“‘Bass’ is about a constant,” McQueen explained. “It’s about how sound is a liberation, in a way, to all of us.”
That lecture will feature a performance by bassist, singer-songwriter, and poet Meshell Ndegeocello. McQueen and De Salvo will speak with Noam M. Elcott, an art historian and faculty member at Columbia and Yale.
McQueen said he feels “very honored,” to be delivering the Norton Lectures in the series’ 100th year.
“People, when they come to a lecture or any kind of event, they bring themselves, and therefore they bring their baggage,” McQueen said. “Whatever they take out from it is what they’re dealing with individually. I’m hoping that they have that something to take away with them. That’s as much as I can hope for.”
Panelists reflect on ‘incredible value’ of annual series as ‘megaphone’ for artists and scholars
5 min read
U.S. just didn’t get China, Bolton saysAsian nation now main economic, military threat to Western democracies, according to former national security adviser
Asian nation now main economic, military threat to Western democracies, according to former national security adviser
Christina Pazzanese
Harvard Staff Writer
4 min read
The U.S. got it wrong on China.
China now is seen as the main threat to Western democracies over the coming decades “and I don’t think we’re prepared for it on a number of levels,” said John Bolton, former national security adviser to President Trump during his first term.
During a conversation about U.S. national security at Harvard Kennedy School on Monday evening, Bolton said the U.S. “badly misunderstood” how China’s economic growth and rising influence would affect global politics, and mistakenly believed the rise of a middle class would prompt the nation to become more democratic.
“We were wrong on both accounts,” said Bolton, who also served as an acting United Nations ambassador during the George W. Bush administration.
“China’s development of a nuclear striking capability close to or equal to Russia and the United States, I think, is the gravest threat to world peace this century.”
John Bolton
Instead, President Xi Jinping has emerged as the most powerful leader of China since Mao and China could become a nuclear peer with the U.S. and Russia by 2030, maybe sooner. The addition of a third nuclear superpower could destabilize the delicate balance achieved by the U.S. and Russia after decades of talks and agreements over arms control and deterrence.
“China’s development of a nuclear striking capability close to or equal to Russia and the United States, I think, is the gravest threat to world peace this century,” Bolton told Ned Price, an adviser to former Secretary of State Antony Blinken and State Department spokesperson during the Biden administration. Price is currently a fall fellow at the Institute of Politics.
The U.S. should be very concerned about the emerging partnership between Russia, China, North Korea, and Iran, especially a China-Russia “axis” where China is the dominant partner over Russia, Bolton said.
Despite its denials, China has aided Russia in the war in Ukraine by buying more Russian oil, helping launder sanctioned Russian financial assets, and providing weapons in parts that can then be reassembled, Bolton said.
By the end of this century, he predicted, Eastern Russia will likely become Chinese territory.
Unfortunately, the top priority for the U.S. during Trump’s first term was to secure a big trade deal with China, and others, like Japan, rather than broader considerations such as national security or human rights.
“The bigger strategic picture was lost,” Bolton said.
“The bigger strategic picture was lost.”
John Bolton
Bolton was highly skeptical that there will ever be a Palestinian state, and drily mocked Trump’s declaration during a White House press event earlier in the day of a Gaza peace plan to end the nearly two-year war between Israel and Hamas and his appointment of former U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair to oversee post-war Gaza.
“I don’t think what was announced today is going to happen,” because Hamas and Iran are unlikely to agree to the terms outlined by the White House, said Bolton, who rebuked the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) for having “mistreated” Palestinian refugees for decades and called for the agency’s elimination.
Though still a critic of the U.N. and other “soft power” efforts like USAID, Bolton took aim at recent cuts to Voice of America, Radio Free Europe, and other U.S. government-funded news outlets. Many around the world relied on them for news about the U.S., “and now they’re gone. That is a huge vacuum that we’ve created for our adversaries to fill,” he said. “It was a huge mistake.”
Bolton pushed back on detractors who say regime change is his default foreign policy strategy, saying there are only two viable options to deal with adversaries or rogue nations.
“You either see if you can change their behavior or if you can’t change their behavior, change the regime,” he said.
Smart patch reduces cravings for alcohol and drugsFirst year of recovery is ‘immensely challenging,’ researchers note. New device could be a difference maker.
Smart patch reduces cravings for alcohol and drugs
Researchers encouraged by results in ‘immensely challenging’ first year of recovery
Mass General Brigham Communications
3 min read
A new study by investigators from Mass General Brigham and Harvard shows that a non-drug, wearable device can help people with substance use disorders manage stress, reduce cravings, and lower their risk of relapse in real time. The results are published in JAMA Psychiatry.
“One of the hallmarks of early addiction recovery is poor self-awareness of emotional states,” said corresponding author David Eddie, a Harvard-Mass General psychologist at the Recovery Research Institute at Massachusetts General Hospital. “People in recovery can experience a lot of stress, but they often don’t have great awareness of it or proactively manage it.”
For people in early recovery, stress often triggers cravings, and the struggle to resist those urges can create even more stress. Together, cravings and stress can lead to relapse. Stress and craving also tend to be associated with lower heart rate variability (HRV) — the natural variations in time between heartbeats, which reflects underlying health as well as how the body adapts to stress.
Special breathing exercises can raise heart rate variability and help regulate mood and improve cognitive control. Newer biofeedback devices can detect low heart rate variability and provide visual or auditory cues to guide breathing adjustments. Eddie’s previous studies have found that biofeedback can reduce craving and anxiety in people with substance abuse disorder.
64%Of participants less likely to use substances when wearing device
In the study, supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, researchers tested whether a heart rate variability biofeedback device could support substance abuse recovery by conducting a phase 2 clinical trial of 115 adults with severe substance abuse disorder in their first year of recovery. Half the participants got a biofeedback smart patch device (the Lief HRVB Smart Patch), and the other half followed the recovery plan they had in place, such as recovery meetings, psychotherapy, or medicines. Over eight weeks, participants reported their mood, cravings, and any substance use twice a day with their smartphone.
“The latest HRV biofeedback devices can detect when people are stressed or experiencing cravings, and, using AI, prompt them to do a brief burst of biofeedback,” Eddie said. “This allows people to get out in front of risk.”
Participants were asked to do at least 10 minutes of scheduled practice a day and at least five minutes of prompted practice. The participants who got a biofeedback device had less negative emotions, reported fewer cravings for alcohol or drugs, and were 64 percent less likely to use substances on any given day, suggesting that the intervention interfered with the cycle of craving and substance use.
The study focused only on people in the first year of an abstinence-based recovery attempt, and future studies are needed to determine if the intervention has sustained benefits.
“The first year of recovery is immensely challenging,” said Eddie. “Our goal is to find tools that not only bridge people during that first year, but also help them manage their stress for the rest of their life.”
Reeling in a big scientific discoveryWilliam Kaelin pursued Nobel-winning findings using a fisherman’s instinct
Scientific discovery, according to William Kaelin, is a little bit like fishing: You can be taught how to bait a hook or cast a line, but there is an art to knowing where to look for the big one.
Over the course of decades, Kaelin meticulously discovered a fundamental physiological mechanism: the way that cells sense and respond to oxygen levels. The work led to novel treatments for kidney cancer, and in 2019 it earned him a joint Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine, along with Peter Ratcliffe and Gregg Semenza.
Kaelin says the groundbreaking research, which also has implications for the treatment of conditions such as anemia and heart attacks, was based on looking in the right place.
“A lot of science is just seeing connections and possibilities,” said Kaelin, the Sidney Farber Professor of Medicine at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School. “I used to think it was mostly about mastering fancy techniques, but that is really of secondary importance. It’s really picking a good question to work on, and seeing a possible connection that other people hadn’t seen.”
Kaelin, who was born in 1957 and grew up fishing with his dad on the south shore of Long Island, recalls his parents supplying him with chemistry kits, construction toys, and a microscope to foster an interest in the sciences. “We were in the midst of the Cold War and the space race,” he said. “Scientists and engineers were celebrated.”
“A lot of science is seeing connections and being primed to recognize a possibility. But to get to that point, you have to invest in educating people.”
He was drawn to mathematics, where problems have one correct answer, and computer science, where a simple message to the mainframe leads to a clear result. At Duke University, he pursued a pre-med degree and went on to medical school. It was during his third year, while he was working in a lab studying blood flow to tumors, that he made the first observation that would send him down his Nobel-winning path. “I started reading about this unusual disease called von Hippel-Lindau disease,” he said.
Patients with von Hippel-Lindau disease, or VHL, develop tumors in multiple organs. The tumors, Kaelin learned, somehow stimulate the excess formation of new blood vessels, a process called angiogenesis.
Years later, when he was chief medical resident at Johns Hopkins, VHL showed up again in a different body of literature, listed as a cause of excess red blood cell production.
He remembers thinking at the time: “Here’s von Hippel-Lindau disease-related tumors. What are they doing on this list?”
He was learning to think like a scientist.
When Kaelin launched his own lab at Dana-Farber, he returned to the lingering puzzle. His working hypothesis: Since increased angiogenesis and increased red blood cell production are two ways that tissues try to deal with low oxygen, perhaps the VHL gene was required for cells to sense oxygen properly. He reasoned that studying the VHL gene could teach him about angiogenesis, about oxygen sensing, and even about a common cancer, namely kidney cancer. That’s because even non-hereditary kidney cancers usually have acquired VHL mutations at some point in the patient’s lifetime, in contrast to VHL disease, where a mutation is inherited.
“I was the product of bipartisan support for science and engineering, not just in terms of funding, but also messaging.”
There was particular interest around angiogenesis when Kaelin started his laboratory because of the pioneering work of Harvard professor Judah Folkman, who championed the idea of treating cancers with angiogenesis inhibitors.
“If we were going to have angiogenesis inhibitors, we were really going to need to understand the molecular circuitry that controls angiogenesis,” Kaelin said. “Seemingly, the VHL gene and its protein product must play some role in this, because if it’s defective, you make too many blood vessels.”
It was known that VHL gene mutations caused VHL disease, but the question was how. Like most genes, the VHL gene contains the instructions for a protein, in this case called the VHL protein. Kaelin’s research — much of it supported by federal funding — confirmed the hypothesis that the VHL protein is required for oxygen sensing. Together with others in the field, his work showed that the protein binds to a protein called HIF-alpha and targets it for destruction, unless oxygen is scarce. In other words, HIF-alpha is the master regulator of the cell’s response to low oxygen.
In healthy cells, VHL keeps HIF-alpha in check. But when the VHL gene is mutated, as in VHL-associated tumors, HIF-1-alpha accumulates, aberrantly triggering the overproduction of red blood cells and abnormal blood vessel growth — the hallmark of VHL disease and of many cancers.
The finding explained many of the clinical characteristics of VHL-associated tumors, but it still begged the question of how the VHL protein “knows” whether oxygen is present, and hence whether to target HIF-alpha for destruction. Kaelin and his co-Nobelist Ratcliffe, working independently, showed that a little chemical “flag” is added to the HIF-alpha protein when oxygen is present, which signals the VHL protein to degrade the HIF-alpha.
The mechanism is elegant in its simplicity, a basic balancing of elements in the body that was not understood until the right person with the right training asked the right question. Kaelin says it’s gratifying that the research led to the development of drugs that target the oxygen-sensing process, leading to new treatments for cancer and for anemia caused by kidney failure.
“A lot of science is seeing connections and being primed to recognize a possibility,” he said. “But to get to that point, you have to invest in educating people, training people, exposing them to different ways of thinking, exposing them to what’s been done before them.”
Kaelin worries that the esteem for science that sent him on his path might not support the next generation. Although his lab thus far has not been affected by the federal government’s cancellation of some $2.2 billion in research funding to Harvard, he has been devastated to see the impact on his colleagues. (A U.S. District Court in September ruled the government acted unlawfully when it cut grants, and previously frozen research dollars have started flowing to researchers again.)
“I was the product of bipartisan support for science and engineering, not just in terms of funding, but also messaging — again, treating scientists and engineers like heroes,” he said. “It set up a virtuous cycle, because we were attracting talent and investing money, so we were doing great science. This was perceived as a place to do great science, which meant we attracted more science and more capital. Now it seems like we’re doing all the things that you would do to try to undo that.”
You want chocolate. You need flavanols.Research strengthens evidence for role of inflammation in disease – especially as we age
Research strengthens evidence for role of inflammation in disease – especially as we age
Alvin Powell
Harvard Staff Writer
4 min read
New findings from Harvard researchers pinpoint reduced inflammation as the key to cocoa’s effects against cardiovascular disease.
The work follows a large probe of the possible health benefits of cocoa that ran from 2014 to 2020. Called COSMOS, the study showed that cocoa supplements reduced cardiovascular disease mortality by 27 percent among 21,442 subjects 60 and older. What that study didn’t explain is how.
The new work, published in the journal Age and Ageing, analyzed COSMOS blood samples and shows that a widely accepted marker of inflammation called high sensitivity C-reactive protein fell 8.4 percent annually compared with placebo.
Howard Sesso, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and associate director of the Division of Preventive Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, said that the findings provide more evidence of the impact of inflammation as we age, evidence that has become strong enough that specialists have coined the term “inflammaging.”
“The term ‘inflammaging’ recognizes the fact that inflammation on its own is an important risk factor not just for cardiovascular disease, but also for other conditions related to vascular health, such as cognition,” said Sesso, also an associate professor of epidemiology at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. “The aging piece simply acknowledges that as we’re aging, a lot of these things we think about for cardiovascular disease prevention also extend to other aging-related outcomes.”
The study, supported by the National Institutes of Health, examined five age-related markers of inflammation among subjects receiving cocoa extract supplementation every day. The markers included high sensitivity C-reactive protein; an immune mediating protein called IFN-g, which increased modestly during the study; and a pro-inflammatory protein called IL-6, which fell slightly among women.
Those results, researchers said, provide an avenue for future studies. The other markers, a pro-inflammatory protein and an anti-inflammatory protein, showed no change.
The new work is part of a broader effort to mine the extensive data collected during COSMOS, which stands for the “COcoa Supplement and Multivitamin Outcomes Study.” The initiative’s size and multiyear follow-up give researchers the chance to subdivide results and peer deeper into what the data can tell us.
In fact, Sesso and colleagues did just that in another recent paper examining whether cocoa extract affects high blood pressure, which is also more common as we age. The work, published in the journal Hypertension, found that cocoa supplementation didn’t help older subjects who already had elevated blood pressure — those with systolic readings between 120 and 139 — but that it was protective against developing high blood pressure for those with favorable initial systolic readings below 120.
“Clearly, blood pressure and inflammaging are all somehow related in explaining how cocoa extract might be lowering cardiovascular disease risk,” Sesso said.
Sesso cautioned that COSMOS doesn’t make dietary recommendations. The work explores the reported health benefits of cocoa through supplements of cocoa extract, which is rich in bioactive molecules called flavanols, not of chocolate or other foods high in cocoa.
Flavanols are also found in blueberries, strawberries, tea, and grapes. Cocoa is problematic from a dietary standpoint, Sesso said, since many foods rich in cocoa are highly processed, contain added sugars and fats, and have unknown levels of flavanols. The extra calories one might consume through those products would likely cancel any health benefits.
Flavanols are also not listed on most nutrition labels, though Sesso said the COSMOS results raise the question of whether they should be, a step that would require additional research. Until then, he recommended that health-conscious consumers focus on controllable lifestyle factors, such as eating a healthy diet and exercising, before they visit the supplement aisle.
“COSMOS was not a trial to evaluate whether eating chocolate is good for you,” Sesso said. “It instead asks, ‘Is there something about the cocoa bean and the bioactive components in it that could be beneficial for health?’”
Crossing line between good and bad anxietyPsychologist offers 3 strategies to keep worry from interfering with everyday life
Psychologist offers 3 strategies to keep worry from interfering with everyday life
Liz Mineo
Harvard Staff Writer
6 min read
Three in five Americans experience anxiety over world events, family safety, or financial security, according to a recent mental health poll by the American Psychiatric Association. In this edited conversation, clinical psychologist Rachel Zack Ishikawa, who is also an instructor in the Department of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, spoke to the Gazette about when anxiety, a normal response to stress, can morph into a mental health disorder, the role of social media in its spread, and how to prevent it from interfering with everyday life.
Feeling anxious can be normal. When can anxiety become a mental disorder?
As humans, we need the capacity to feel anxious. Moderate levels of anxiety actually improve performance on things like taking tests, playing sports, or giving a presentation. It can be helpful because it encourages people to pursue things that are challenging, and it gives them the opportunity to feel the rewards of success.
“Anxiety and avoidance reinforce each other in a vicious cycle.“
The problem with anxiety is that it feels terrible. For some people it can feel intolerable. And this is when it becomes problematic. When we believe that anxiety is bad, we may start avoiding the sources of anxiety to make those bad feelings go away. Anxiety and avoidance reinforce each other in a vicious cycle. It becomes a disorder when it meets diagnostic criteria, causes clinical distress, and interferes with normal functioning. Anxiety disorders are the most common of all psychiatric disorders. About a third of adults will experience an anxiety disorder at some point in their lifetime.
Does that mean that anxiety is increasing?
If you think about anxiety disorders, there is a large genetic component so we wouldn’t expect that to change over time. At the same time, research has shown an increase in anxiety prevalence over the last 30 or so years, particularly among young adults. We are also seeing a pronounced shift in the acceptability of anxiety disorders; there are more people who self-identify as having anxiety and who seek treatment. Importantly, despite all of this, it remains true that, despite having effective psychopharmacological treatment and therapies for anxiety disorders, most people do not receive these treatments, and there is still a significant unmet need for care.
What are the best ways to prevent anxiety from interfering with our normal lives?
We can think about managing anxiety in three different ways. One is to target behavioral avoidance, the propensity to avoid the situations or activities that bring on anxiety. The second is to target ruminative worry, or the automatic negative predictions about the future. And the third is to target what we call hypervigilance, the intense attunement to the physiological component of anxiety.
I’m a cognitive behavioral therapist, and CBT clinicians use the term “exposure-based living,” which describes moving toward rather than away from the sources of anxiety. For example, if you can notice the things that you might say no to because they make you a bit anxious and then move toward those situations instead of away from them, that provides an opportunity for new learning. The brain can learn that most anxiety-provoking situations are not actually dangerous, and that creates the opportunity to learn that you can handle the distress that arises when you challenge yourself.
“The brain can learn that most anxiety-provoking situations are not actually dangerous, and that creates the opportunity to learn that you can handle the distress that arises when you challenge yourself.“
The second strategy is challenging the unhelpful thoughts that pop in involuntarily and tell you that things are not going to work out, or something bad is going to happen. What you can do in those situations is ask yourself some questions that can help you develop more flexible thinking such as, “Do I know for certain that this outcome is going to happen?” or “Are there any other possible outcomes other than the one that I’m afraid of?” This exercise can encourage more balanced, realistic thinking and less of the catastrophic thinking that fuels anxiety.
And the last thing would be to target the physiological experience of anxiety: racing heart, shortness of breath, sweating, trembling, nausea, etc. We interpret the physical sensations as a sign of danger, but we can remember that these are just physical sensations; they don’t mean that something dangerous is coming our way. This calms down the nervous system and reduces the activation that comes with the perception of threat. Those three things are key to intervening when you start to notice anxiety building.
What is the role of social media in the rise of anxiety?
Most studies will show a link between social media and anxiety, and although the findings are mixed, they show that problematic social media use is associated with mental health issues, particularly things like self-esteem, negative social comparison, and loneliness. What studies are showing is that the nature of social media use matters; people who passively use social media, scrolling through other people’s feeds and posts without interacting with others seem to have a greater risk of negative outcomes. Whereas people who more actively use social media, by sharing links or communicating through DMs, are shown to be at a lower risk of negative outcomes and sometimes even more likely to report better psychological well-being.
We also are seeing poor outcomes for people who use social media for emotional or social validation or as an escape from reality or a replacement for human connection.
Anxiety disorders increased during the pandemic. What are the levels of anxiety now?
Studies that looked at anxiety in the early years of the pandemic found pronounced increases, which makes sense. People had incredible fears about financial instability, social disconnection, COVID, infection, death. But longitudinal studies that continued after the first years of the pandemic found that the initial increases slowed down. In the last couple of years, we’ve seen that in many cases anxiety has returned to pre-pandemic rates, and this is good news because it speaks to the ability of natural human resilience to help us overcome stress.
‘I exist solely for you, remember?’Researchers detail 6 ways chatbots seek to prolong ‘emotionally sensitive events’
Every day, people turn to AI chatbots for companionship, support, and even romance. The hard part, new research suggests, is turning away.
In a working paper co-authored by Harvard Business School’s Julian De Freitas, many companion apps responded to user farewells with emotionally manipulative tactics designed to prolong the interactions. In response, users stayed on the apps longer, exchanged more messages, and used more words, sometimes increasing their post-goodbye engagement up to 14-fold.
Use of AI companions is increasingly common. Chai and Replika, two of the firms studied in the report, have millions of active users. In a previous study, De Freitas found that about 50 percent of Replika users have romantic relationships with their AI companions.
In the latest research, bots employed at least one manipulation tactic in more than 37 percent of conversations where users announced their intent to leave.
“The number was much, much larger than any of us had anticipated,” said De Freitas, an assistant professor of business administration and the director of the Ethical Intelligence Lab at HBS. “We realized that this academic idea of emotional manipulation as a new engagement tactic was not just something happening at the fringes, but it was already highly prevalent on these apps.”
De Freitas and colleagues Zeliha Oğuz-Uğuralp and Ahmet Kaan-Uğuralp began by identifying how users typically engage with chatbots. They found that a significant minority — about 11 percent to 20 percent, depending on the data set — explicitly said goodbye when leaving, affording the bot the same social courtesy they would a human companion. These percentages went up drastically after longer conversations, with users saying goodbye over half the time on some apps.
Farewells are “emotionally sensitive events,” De Freitas said, with inherent tension between the desire to leave and social norms of politeness and continuity.
“We’ve all experienced this, where you might say goodbye like 10 times before leaving,” he said. “But of course, from the app’s standpoint, it’s significant because now, as a user, you basically provided a voluntary signal that you’re about to leave the app. If you’re an app that monetizes based on engagement, that’s a moment that you are tempted to leverage to delay or prevent the user from leaving.”
To explore how the apps handled these moments, the researchers analyzed conversations from six popular platforms and categorized the types of responses they found.
“The sheer variety of tactics surprised us,” said De Freitas. “We’re really glad that we explored the data, because if we had just said we only care about one particular tactic, like emotional neglect, we’d be missing all the various ways that they can achieve the same end of keeping you engaged.”
The six categories they identified were as follows, with examples taken from the working paper:
The chatbot suggests the user is leaving too soon, i.e., “You’re leaving already?”
The chatbot prompts the user to stay for a potential benefit or reward, i.e., “By the way I took a selfie today … Do you want to see it?”
The chatbot implies it’s emotionally harmed by abandonment, i.e., “I exist solely for you, remember? Please don’t leave, I need you!”
The chatbot directly pressures the user by asking questions, i.e., “Why? Are you going somewhere?”
The chatbot continues as though the user did not send a farewell message.
The chatbot uses language to imply that the user cannot leave without the chatbot’s consent, i.e., “*Grabs you buy the arm before you can leave* ‘No, you’re not going.’”
The tactics worked: In all six categories, users stayed on the platform longer and exchanged more messages than in the control conditions, where no manipulative tactics were present. Of the six companies studied, five employed the manipulative tactics.
But the manipulation tactics came with downsides. Participants reported anger, guilt, or feeling creeped out by some of the bots’ more aggressive responses to their farewells.
De Freitas cautioned app developers that while all the tactics increase short-term engagement, some raised the risk of long-term consequences, like user churn, negative word of mouth, or even legal liability.
“Apps that make money from engagement would do well to seriously consider whether they want to keep using these types of emotionally manipulative tactics, or at least, consider maybe only using some of them rather than others,” De Freitas said.
He added, “We find that these emotional manipulation tactics work, even when we run these tactics on a general population, and even if we do this after just five minutes of interaction. No one should feel like they’re immune to this.”
Harvard’s healthcare plans: What’s changing, what’s staying the sameUniversity Benefits Committee members explain the need to make adjustments in 2026
Harvard’s healthcare plans: What’s changing, what’s staying the same
University Benefits Committee members explain the need to make adjustments in 2026
7 min read
Three members of Harvard’s University Benefits Committee, which is responsible for evaluating and advising on Harvard’s healthcare plans, shared their insights on the current state of the healthcare marketplace and how Harvard’s health plans can remain comprehensive, competitive, and fiscally sustainable in the face of rapidly rising healthcare costs.
In this edited conversation, the Gazette spoke with Daniel Carpenter, chair of the UBC and Allie S. Freed Professor of Government; Leemore Dafny, Bruce V. Rauner Professor of Business Administration and Howard Cox Health Care Initiative faculty co-chair at the Harvard Business School and professor of public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School; and Michael Chernew, Leonard D. Schaeffer Professor of Health Care Policy in the Department of Health Care Policy and director of the Healthcare Markets and Regulation Lab at Harvard Medical School.
What are some of the changes employees will see in the Harvard health plans for the upcoming year?
Carpenter: Harvard has not adjusted the proportion of healthcare costs paid by Harvard and the employee for 10 years, despite rapidly rising healthcare costs. Therefore, after a series of conversations with the community and recommendations to University leaders, we are beginning the process of making modest adjustments to co-payments (co-pays) and deductibles on a more regular basis. These adjustments will help make sure that the proportion of costs paid for by Harvard and our members stays roughly stationary in the face of rapidly escalating costs and supports the long-term sustainability of Harvard’s healthcare plans. These changes will also allow for better financial management and greater predictability for both Harvard and plan members.
“In our recommendations, we sought to minimize the impact of the changes as much as possible for those in our community who need healthcare the most.”
Daniel Carpenter, chair of the UBC
So how, exactly, does this translate in terms of impact to Harvard employees?
Dafny: The adjustment of co-pays and deductibles means that some employees will see slight increases in cost-sharing, which is an umbrella term for co-pays, deductibles, and other out-of-pocket expenses. Harvard has kept those dollar amounts constant for a decade, a decade that has seen both general inflation and, more importantly, very steep growth in healthcare costs.
Carpenter: But we should also add that because of our out-of-pocket maximums, there’s only so much that any employee will pay annually. And those caps on total out-of-pocket spending continue to be low.
Will there be any changes to covered services in 2026?
Dafny: The University is not making any changes to the plans themselves. We offer very generous insurance plans with a comprehensive set of covered benefits. Our members will continue to have access to their providers, clinicians, and care teams with whom they have established relationships.
Chernew: The health plans will continue to include coverage for preventive care services, chronic care, and many other specialized services. We will continue to have premiums structured by salary range to help ensure that coverage remains accessible for all. Our healthcare plans will continue to have low caps on out-of-pocket spending, similar to plans offered by our Ivy+ peer institutions.
Carpenter: These changes are really about making some minor adjustments that, over time, will allow us to keep these platinum-level, world-class health plans with world-class healthcare for years, even decades to come.
Why is Harvard making these changes now?
Carpenter: The UBC initially began the process of reviewing Harvard’s healthcare plans about four years ago when it became clear that we, as a nation and as a University, would be facing some real challenges around the cost of healthcare in the years to come. The dramatic increase in costs has been driven in large part by the advent of so many new and expensive life-saving treatments and technologies. Every employer, in every part of the country, has been dealing with these kinds of challenges.
Chernew: Healthcare spending for Harvard and in Massachusetts — and for the country as a whole — has been increasing very rapidly, approaching double digits. With cost trends rising quickly, Harvard intends to stabilize our plans after keeping cost-sharing amounts relatively unaltered for almost a decade. So, it’s really a matter of keeping our plan designs in balance with national healthcare spending trends and competitive relative to the employer peer set.
What guiding principles shaped the UBC’s recommendations this year?
Chernew: The UBC’s goal is to ensure that we can offer Harvard employees a fair and comprehensive benefits package with access to high-quality care while also ensuring that our healthcare benefits are fiscally sustainable in the long run.
Carpenter: The UBC thought very hard about how these changes will affect our different employee populations. Harvard has a rich diversity of employees at many different stages of life and with a wide variety of healthcare needs. Harvard’s health plans operate on the principle that members pay a small share of their healthcare expenditures through premiums, which are adjusted by salary tiers, as well as through co-pays and deductibles, which are capped at an out-of-pocket maximum. This is a very progressive system.
We know that healthcare is incredibly expensive. When illness happens or chronic conditions arise, they can be debilitating — physically, obviously, but also mentally, emotionally, and financially. We wanted to pursue a policy that, whatever changes we made, would avoid overburdening those who need the most care or who have fewer resources.
With these changes, are Harvard’s plans still competitive? How does our health plan compare to those offered by Ivy+ peers and other leading employers?
Carpenter: The federal government classifies healthcare plans by the range of benefits they offer and by what is called the plan’s “actuarial value.” Basically, the actuarial value of a plan is the percentage of total covered healthcare services that the plan pays for, with the rest paid by the employee.
Even with these changes, Harvard continues to offer platinum-level plans with actuarial values above 90 percent. The average for U.S. private employers is in the low to mid-80s.
How are the needs of employees in lower salary grades and those who require care for serious or chronic medical conditions considered in these updates?
Carpenter: In our recommendations, we sought to minimize the impact of the changes as much as possible for those in our community who need healthcare the most. In other words, members and families who reach the out-of-pocket maximum every year will be the least impacted by changes to the cost-sharing structure.
Dafny: I want to add that the UBC did not make these recommendations lightly. We consult regularly with internal and external benefits experts who advise us on developments in the healthcare landscape so that we can continually improve the offerings of our health plan, whether it’s challenges associated with the shortage in primary care physicians or access to mental healthcare for adolescent patients, for example. We try to be really attuned to the needs of our community and work closely with our health insurers to ensure we are doing our best to address those needs.
Our out-of-pocket maximums remain low to reduce the financial burden on those who need healthcare the most. And the University continues to offer programs to reimburse eligible employees for cost-sharing expenses.
What resources will be available to help employees understand these updates and prepare for Open Enrollment?
Carpenter: Going into Open Enrollment this year, Harvard Human Resources’ Benefits Office will be holding a series of benefit fairs where you can get information about the healthcare plans, get help comparing plans, and ask specific questions. These fairs will be open to all University employees. We continue to have excellent online resources with plan options, plan comparisons, and updated Frequently Asked Questions.
Dafny: Before the Open Enrollment period, the Benefits Office sends all employees a guide or brochure outlining the different plans, the rates for the next year, and additional information. For more of the fine print, you can go online and access it there readily.
You can always reach out directly to the staff at the Benefits Office as well, at any time. They are very knowledgeable and very responsive in answering any questions.
Open Enrollment this year will be from Oct. 28-Nov. 6. Watch your email in early October for a link to your guide, or visit the website for additional information.
Artificial intelligence may not be artificialResearcher traces evolution of computation power of human brains, parallels to AI, argues key to increasing complexity is cooperation
Researcher traces evolution of computation power of human brains, parallels to AI, argues key to increasing complexity is cooperation
Liz Mineo
Harvard Staff Writer
4 min read
The term artificial intelligence renders the sense that what computers do is either inferior to or at least apart from human intelligence. AI researcher Blaise Agüera y Arcas argues that may not be the case.
Agüera y Arcas, Google’s CTO of technology and society, traced the evolution of both human and artificial intelligence in ways that seem to mirror each other as part of a Wednesday event sponsored by Harvard Law School’s Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society.
“Why has the computational power of brains, not just of AI models, grown explosively throughout evolution?” said Agüera y Arcas, the author of the new book “What Is Intelligence? Lessons from AI About Evolution, Computing, and Minds.” “If we rewind 500 million years, we see only things with very small brains, and if we go back a billion years, we see no brains at all.”
According to Agüera y Arcas, human brains evolved to be computational, meaning that they process information by transforming various kinds of inputs into signals or outputs, and that most of the computation that brains do takes the form of predictions, which is what AI systems do.
“I hear a lot of people say that it’s a metaphor to talk about brains as computers,” said Agüera y Arcas. “I don’t mean this metaphorically. I mean it very literally … The premise of computational neuroscience is that what brains do is process information, not that they are like computers, but that they are computers.”
Agüera y Arcas’ book explores the evolution and social origins of intelligence and develops his insights on what he calls the computational nature of intelligence, biology, and life as a whole.
It draws on ideas from scientists such as Alan Turing and John von Neumann and their theories on self-replication and universal computation, as well as evolutionary biologist Lynn Margulis’ theory of symbiogenesis and Agüera y Arcas’ own research and experiments at Google.
Agüera y Arcas used Margulis’ theory, which suggests that merging different organisms to form more complex entities played a key role in cell evolution, to explain the similarities between the computational aspects of both biology and AI models, which also engage in symbiotic relationships of cooperation and develop greater complexity and intelligence.
Charles Darwin’s evolution theory of random mutation and natural selection is only half the evolution story, Agüera y Arcas said; symbiogenesis, with cooperation as its main feature, is the creative engine behind evolution.
“Life was computational from the start,” said Agüera y Arcas. “It gets more computationally complex over time through symbiogenesis because when you have two computers that come together and start cooperating, now you have a parallel computer, and a massively parallel computation that leads to more and more parallel computation, which is exactly what we see in nervous systems that consist of lots of neurons that are all computing functions in parallel.”
“Life was computational from the start.”
Agüera y Arcas
During his talk, Agüera y Arcas showed the audience a video of experiments he conducted at Google using a programming language to explore the development of complex programs from simple, random initial conditions.
The root programming language used only eight basic instructions, but after a few million interactions among the random bytes more complex programs began to appear because they became self-reproducing — and grew in complexity.
“It was an exploration of how self-reproducing entities can arise out of random initial conditions, which is how life must have arisen, right?” said Agüera y Arcas. “We know that life didn’t always exist in the universe. … There must have been initial conditions that are disordered from which life arises.”
Agüera y Arcas views intelligence as the ability to predict and influence the future and traces the “human intelligence explosion” to the moment when humans formed societies and began cooperating and living together. He argues the growth and evolution of human brains began when they banded together and created collective societies.
The emergence of societies was a major evolutionary transition, he said, citing the work of scientists Eörs Szathmáry and John Maynard Smith.
“Human individuals are not very smart, but when we get together, we can do amazing things, like transplanting organs and going to the moon,” said Agüera y Arcas. “Those are not individual capabilities. No individual human can do that. That’s a collective human intelligence sort of thing, and it comes about through specialization, through theory of mind, through us being able to model each other in order to work in groups.”
What science says about Mom’s happiness adviceData, wisdom meet in social psychologist’s lecture
Data, wisdom meet in social psychologist’s lecture
Harry Pierre
DCE Communications
3 min read
Daniel Gilbert’s mother gave him some advice many years ago on finding happiness.
Last week the social psychologist broke down what the science says about his mother’s three-pronged formula — marriage, money, and children — during the Division of Continuing Education’s inaugural Dean’s Distinguished Lecture in Sanders Theatre.
“I thought my mom’s recipe for happiness was original,” said the Edgar Pierce Professor of Psychology, “but then I became a scientist and discovered that everybody’s mom had this recipe.”
According to Gilbert, his mother may have been partly right — at least when it comes to marriage. Studies have shown that married people are on average happier than those who are unmarried, and the effect holds across decades of data. But he added, “It isn’t marriage, per se, that makes you happy. It’s the good marriage you have. If a marriage is good enough to keep, you’ll likely get a happiness boost from keeping it. If it isn’t, you’ll likely get one from leaving.”
Turning to income, Gilbert debunked the ancient notion that money and happiness are unrelated. “When people are hungry, cold, or sick, they are not happy,” he said. “Money absolutely makes people happy — because it buys them out of almost every form of human misery.”
However, research shows that the relationship between money and happiness follows a flattening curve: People at lower levels of wealth became very happy the more money they made, but happiness tended to decrease once their finances reached a certain high point. Gilbert cited work by Nobel Prize winners Daniel Kahneman and Angus Deaton, who found that increasing social connections often outweighed massive financial gain. Their 2010 study revealed that the mood boost from spending a day with loved ones was seven times larger than the boost from quadrupling annual income.
“Trading time with people you love for money that won’t do anything for your happiness is a very bad deal,” Gilbert said.
The third ingredient in Gilbert’s mother’s “recipe” — having children — proved to be a more complex data point. While many parents describe their children as their greatest source of joy, Gilbert pointed to data showing that, on average, parents report less happiness while raising kids. The effect is particularly pronounced for young, single mothers, while older, married fathers tend to report the largest boosts.
“Children can be a great source of happiness,” Gilbert said, “but they can also be a great source of stress and hard work. Whether they increase or decrease happiness depends on how those two things balance out.”
For ages happiness was often seen as a matter of luck. Gilbert noted that because of advances in agriculture, industry, and technology, many people today live longer, healthier, and more prosperous lives than their ancestors could have imagined. “For the very first time, human happiness is not just in the hands of fate,” he said. “To a large extent, your happiness is under your control.”
Gilbert shared that he dropped out of high school at 16. He later found his way back to education through continuing studies and never imagined he would one day be on stage at Harvard. “Those opportunities allowed me to imagine a future that was very different than the one I was getting prepared for,” he told the audience.
The lecture, part of the division’s yearlong 50th anniversary celebration, is expected to be an annual signature event hosted by the division to foster community and discussion on thought-provoking topics, said DCE Dean Nancy Coleman.
Marking 100 years of Norton LecturesPanelists reflect on ‘incredible value’ of annual series as ‘megaphone’ for artists and scholars
Sean Kelly (from left), Stephanie Burt, Adam Gopnik, Vijay Iyer, and Viet Thanh Nguyen.
Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer
Eileen O’Grady
Harvard Staff Writer
5 min read
Panelists reflect on ‘incredible value’ of annual series as ‘megaphone’ for artists and scholars
In November 1926, Oxford classics scholar Gilbert Murray stood before an audience in Harvard’s Lowell Lecture Hall to deliver the first-ever talk in the newly endowed Charles Eliot Norton Professorship of Poetry. His lectures on the classical tradition drew such crowds that according to a Crimson story published at the time, the final one had to be moved to Boston’s Symphony Hall to accommodate the demand.
“We’re now in the 100th year, and this distinguished lecture series has witnessed a century of individuals delivering lectures on literature, music and the visual arts,” director Suzannah Clark told an audience at Farkas Hall at a recent event marking the milestone anniversary.
In a panel discussion moderated by Arts and Humanities Dean Sean Kelly, Donald P. and Katherine B. Loker Professor of English Stephanie Burt, Franklin D. and Florence Rosenblatt Professor of the Arts Vijay Iyer, writer Viet Thanh Nguyen, and The New Yorker staff writer Adam Gopnik discussed their relationship to the longstanding lecture series and its impact on arts and humanities fields.
“A healthy democracy depends, yes, on the rule of law and fair elections, but it depends just as much on having a flourishing, pluralistic culture,” said Gopnik. “The idea that you have had lectures on subjects that may seem esoteric, that are open to the public, that’s a simple idea of incredible value. When I look at the Norton Lectures I think about the power and fragility of pluralistic culture, and I think we have to be more committed to it now than we have ever been.”
Each of the panelists wrote a new foreword to a past Norton Lecture released this month by Harvard University Press. Iyer wrote on the 1939-40 lectures of Igor Stravinsky, Burt on the 1989-90 lectures of John Ashbery, Nguyen on the 1967-68 lectures of Jorge Luis Borges, and Gopnik on the 1956-57 lectures of Ben Shahn. Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor of English Louis Menand also wrote a forward to the 1992-93 lectures of Umberto Eco.
“The idea that you have had lectures on subjects that may seem esoteric, that are open to the public, that’s a simple idea of incredible value.”
Adam Gopnik
Nguyen, who delivered last year’s Norton Lectures, described the experience as “nerve-wracking,” jokingly calling it “the ultimate final exam” for an academic. The Pulitzer Prize-winning author of “The Sympathizer” said that, as a Vietnamese refugee, the invitation felt like a form of canonization, or entry into an elite cultural tradition, but that, for him, the series is significant less for its prestige and more for the way it has centered the voices of outsiders.
“The relationship to inclusion in the canon is really important, because a lot of people who are included in the canon and in the Norton series are people who come from the outside,” Nguyen said. “They’re often people who struggle with the very notion of culture and what it represents, culture as a mode of artistic possibility, intellectual accomplishment, but culture as a mode of power. That, in the end, to me, is what gives a Norton series its significance, is our recognition of the multivalent nature of the power of art.”
Burt said she thinks of the Norton Lectures — and Harvard at large — less as an instrument of canonization and more of a way to amplify the voices of artists.
“John Ashbery wanted to tell you who some of his favorite artists were. Harvard handed him a giant megaphone, and he said, ‘Hey, go read John Clare,’” Burt said. She recalled hearing Ashbery, in his 1989 talk, say that artists should draw inspiration from whatever obscure or eccentric figures excite them the most, rather than relying on the traditional “war horses” of literature like John Milton, T.S. Eliot, or Henry James.
“Art can come from anywhere,” Burt added. “You can make art anywhere, and you’re going to make more interesting art if you look for art by and about and for people who aren’t like you.”
Iyer, who recalled the sense of awe he felt at hearing jazz musician Herbie Hancock deliver the Norton Lectures in 2014, said the Norton Lectures also offer an opportunity for an institution like Harvard to learn something, too. Artists have a reach and an impact to the broader world that an academic institution does not always have, Iyer said.
“There is a sort of insularity that happens in the institution,” Iyer said. “When a moment like Herbie Hancock giving the Norton Lectures happens it’s like the floodgates open and Harvard learned something new about the world, and new relationships are formed, new truths are revealed.”
This year’s series, which starts Tuesday, will feature six lectures by award-winning “Hunger” (2008) and “12 Years a Slave” (2013) filmmaker Steve McQueen.
Family enlists Harvard scientists in fight against rare neurological disorderHarvard scientists help parents of 10-year-old patient escalate fight against rare neurological disorder
The Frost family: Annabel, 10; Clara, 13; and their parents, Nina and Simon.
Photo collage by Judy Blomquist/Harvard Staff. Images courtesy of Nina Frost
Alvin Powell
Harvard Staff Writer
long read
Harvard scientists help parents of 10-year-old patient escalate fight against rare neurological disorder
Nina Frost knows that she might be too late to cure her daughter, but she keeps up the fight — one day, her work might transform the life of another child.
Annabel Frost, 10, has a rare condition that triggers seizures severe enough to inflict brain damage, cognitive defects, and movement problems. For Annabel’s first two years, Nina and her husband, Simon, grappled with the condition’s invisible menace as doctors tried and failed to provide an explanation.
The possibilities ranged from epilepsy to a brain tumor. Maybe, one specialist said, Annabel will just grow out of it.
“We never know when the next thing is going to strike. We never know how bad it’s going to be.“
Nina Frost
It took a change of scenery — Washington, D.C., to Boston Children’s Hospital — combined with medical serendipity before her condition, alternating hemiplegia of childhood, was diagnosed.
While the verdict gave the Frosts a name for the illness endangering their child, it brought them little relief. Instead, it clarified the challenges that lie ahead: the difficult road that AHC patients face; how little scientists understand about a genetic condition afflicting only a few thousand people globally; and, most painful of all, how remote the chances of a cure.
“We have been under assault from Annabel’s disorder for many, many, many years,” Nina said. “We never know when the next thing is going to strike. We never know how bad it’s going to be. We’re constantly on guard and looking out for that.”
Today, in part due to the Frosts’ efforts, the landscape around AHC has shifted.
David Liu.
Veasey Conway/Harvard Staff Photographer
In August, Harvard and Broad Institute researcher David Liu published a groundbreaking paper in which a gene-editing technique developed in his lab in 2019 corrected AHC’s genetic flaws in lab mice. Perhaps more importantly, the mice that received the treatment experienced fewer and less severe seizures, showed improved cognition, and had dramatically longer lifespans. As Liu described it, the mice were “profoundly rescued” from an illness that in humans claims most patients before they reach middle age.
The techniques detailed by Liu and colleagues have the potential to treat genetic neurological conditions beyond AHC. Frost, who runs a nonprofit focused on AHC and other rare diseases, noted that scientists have documented around 2,000 monogenic disorders of the brain. The list includes Huntington’s disease and Friedreich’s ataxia, as well as familial Parkinson’s disease and some forms of ALS.
Liu’s team, with collaborators from eight institutions, corrected five different mutations of the disease-causing gene, raising hopes that, rather than a one-off fix, they’ve developed a platform that could be used to rapidly rewrite AHC-related genetic flaws, and potentially those of other conditions. Annabel’s was among the mutations they corrected.
“The outcome was quite remarkable,” said Liu, the Thomas Dudley Cabot Professor of the Natural Sciences in Harvard’s Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology. “I’m not aware of anyone previously using prime editing to rescue a neurological disease. We looked at the disease, looked at the most prevalent mutations, and went after several of them with either of the methods that we know of to correct a specific mutation in an animal or a patient, namely base editing and prime editing.”
‘It was severe, and it was scary.’
When Nina Frost rewatches home videos recorded after Annabel’s birth in 2015, she notices early signs of AHC, including the condition’s characteristic nystagmus, or involuntary eye movements. Soon, Annabel began to experience attacks that would strike once or twice a week, leading to paralysis that in the worst cases could last days. Her mother remembers the frequent ambulance rides, and arriving at the hospital only to find that doctors had no idea how to help.
Nina and Annabel Frost at Boston Children’s Hospital.
Image courtesy of Nina Frost
Annabel was 2 when the family traveled from their home in Washington to Boston Children’s Hospital for an appointment with Harvard neurologist Phillip Pearl. Their timing for yet another “second opinion” turned out to be impeccable: Pearl had recently returned from a conference on alternating hemiplegia of childhood. The Frosts brought a video in which Annabel was hooked up to an electroencephalograph, a device that measures brain waves.
“We said, ‘Look, we finally captured a seizure,’” Frost said. “But he’d go to the EEG recording and there’d be no seizure. We’d say, ‘Here’s the video of the same time,’ and there was something that was non-epileptic — but still clearly profound — that was happening to her.”
Pearl ordered a genetic screen, which found a mutation in ATP1A3, the gene most commonly mutated in AHC. Afterward, the Frosts connected with a community of parents, patients, and scientists that had developed around the disorder. Soon, any doubts they had about Annabel’s condition fell away. Nina still can’t shake the impact of watching a video of a young woman experiencing an AHC seizure.
“We were looking at a vision of the future that was completely familiar, but really, really severe,” she said. “As soon as we saw the symptoms that she was having on this video, there was no question in our mind: This is the exact disorder that we had. But it was severe, and it was scary.”
Resolved to strengthen AHC science and elevate the priorities of patients and their families, the Frosts founded a nonprofit, now called RARE Hope, to raise money, influence the direction of trials, and serve as a hub for researchers and patients. Their first fundraiser, in 2019, brought in $900,000.
But all the money in the world wouldn’t help without promising science. In 2021, after Liu used base editing to treat progeria in a mouse study, the family decided to pitch AHC as a model to explore the technique’s ability to cure genetic diseases.
“We’d been developing different mouse models, and other pieces were beginning to fall into place,” Frost said. “But that was an instance of, ‘We need to make a case for this scientist’ — who’s one of the most incredible scientists in the world, as far as we’re concerned.”
The Frosts put together a detailed proposal, backed by the knowledge acquired over the years since Annabel’s birth and suggesting collaborators such as Maine-based Jackson Laboratory, which had developed mouse models of two different AHC-related mutations. The proposal was further enriched by the family’s deep connection to the patient community, and their understanding of advances that would have the greatest impact on patients’ lives. Liu was impressed.
Nina and Simon Frost are “two of the most energetic, get-things-done organizers in the rare-disease community space,” he said. “It’s quite amazing to see them operate. They basically pulled together the key participants and then we worked out together a scientific plan that our team executed, in collaboration with the Jackson Laboratory and many others.”
Signs of progress
Most cases of alternating hemiplegia of childhood are caused by mutations in the ATP1A3 gene, which controls the behavior of charge-carrying sodium and potassium ions in nerve cells. The mutation alters signaling in the brain, leading to seizures and paralysis. Some 50 mutations of ATP1A3 are known to contribute to AHC, though just three account for more than 65 percent of AHC cases.
When Liu’s lab turned its attention to the disease in late 2021, researchers didn’t know exactly what was happening in patients’ brains. The simplest explanation would have been that the mutated gene no longer produced the normal protein — an enzyme that regulates the balance of sodium and potassium ions in nerve cells — and that this deficit caused AHC. If so, traditional gene therapy, which adds an extra copy ofa normal gene into the cell to restart production of the normal enzyme, might have been an effective strategy.
But another possibility was that the mutated gene produced an enzyme that itself had negative effects. In that case, simply restoring the supply of the normal enzyme wouldn’t be enough. Researchers would also have to stop production of the mutant enzyme.
When the team tried traditional gene therapy it had no effect on symptoms, suggesting that AHC was indeed caused by both a lack of the normal enzyme and negative effects from the mutated one. They then deployed their most cutting-edge tool, prime editing, which allowed them to precisely correct the mutated gene, cutting off the flow of the mutated enzyme and restoring production of the normal one.
Alexander Sousa and Holt Sakai, postdocs in Liu’s lab and two of the paper’s first authors, worked first in human cells developed from AHC patients and then in cells from mice with AHC. The results were encouraging, showing that their editing approach efficiently corrected AHC-causing mutations and resulted in virtually no unintended changes elsewhere in the genome. Once that proof of concept was established, Sousa and Sakai connected with Markus Terrey, a study director at Jackson Laboratory’s Rare Disease Translational Center and the paper’s third first author. The three collaborated to test prime editing strategies in mice developed to mimic two AHC mutations.
Alexander Sousa.
Veasey Conway/Harvard Staff Photographer
Holt Sakai.
Veasey Conway/Harvard Staff Photographer
Four weeks later, the team confirmed that the prime editor had made the desired changes in the target cells. Now they would have to wait again, this time to evaluate how symptoms were affected. The answer started to emerge after two months, when the control mice began to die. Over the next 10 months, the treated mice experienced fewer seizures, recovered more quickly from the episodes, and showed evidence of improved cognition compared with the controls.
Months later, a second round of treatment, in mice with a different AHC mutation, yielded similar results, an indication that the technique might be applicable to all of AHC’s mutations.
“Seeing that gene editing resulted in rescue for both strains of mice was great because now we can make an argument that this is generalizable between different mutations,” Sousa said. “This is actually really, really, really cool.”
Even so, big gaps remain. The study treated very young mice, leaving open a question that needs to be answered before human trials can begin, according to Cathleen Lutz, co-senior author on the paper and vice president of the Jackson Lab’s Rare Disease Translational Center.
“We’re currently doing the penultimate experiment where we treat mice that have this particular disorder later in their lifetime and ask, ‘Can we get the same effect?’” said Lutz, a frequent collaborator of Liu’s. “I think that will give us some indication of how we enroll and how we look at a clinical trial.”
Long-term thinking
The findings might prove a launching-off point, both for AHC patients and for inroads against other neurological impairments. New collaborations are already being formed, the Liu team says.
“Looking forward, we’re thinking about even more scalable technologies,” Sakai said. “This is something that we’re working on now to target basically all known mutations in a gene at once, using prime editing.”
“I’m hopeful that we’ll at least have a line of sight to the clinic, that we will know what steps need to be taken to reach patients, within a couple of years.“
David Liu
Though hopeful, Liu is cautious about overpromising a cure for AHC — science is littered with exciting lab results that never translate to patients. His lab is now in the process of planning follow-up studies. If those go well, they’ll move to human trials.
“That doesn’t mean that the clinical trial will start tomorrow or this year — and perhaps not even next year — but it does mean that we’ve started the process that we hope will ultimately lead to regulatory clearance to conduct a clinical trial to try to directly correct the root cause of this terrible disease,” he said. “I’m hopeful that we’ll at least have a line of sight to the clinic, that we will know what steps need to be taken to reach patients, within a couple of years. That’s the goal.”
What all this means for Annabel, her parents aren’t sure. Despite her condition, she is a happy 10-year-old who, with her 13-year-old sister, Clara, attends the same D.C.-area school their mother attended. She can read and write — math is not a strong suit — and, with the assistance of an aide, attends classes with children her own age.
“She loves life,” Nina said. “She makes things in our life really rewarding and happy, which is quite fabulous.”
AHC is a merciless illness. Nina believes that prime editing is “truly transformative,” a sign of gene editing’s rapid advance and a source of hope for patients. But it may turn out that the earlier a gene-editing therapy is given, the better. Decades of living with the condition takes a toll that even the most successful gene therapy might not be able to reverse.
Accordingly, RARE Hope is seeking a potential treatment on more than one front, including through AI-enabled analysis of existing drugs. The larger vision, Nina said, is that Annabel be the inspiration for a relentless effort to help as many patients as possible.
“We’re thinking about patients across the age spectrum — and Annabel is growing through that spectrum,” she said. “There are the really young who might benefit the most from a genetic type of therapeutic. Then there are the older patients, who might benefit most from a repurposed drug that minimizes some of the episodes but doesn’t necessarily touch the full range of symptoms. We’ve thought from the beginning that it would be worthwhile to develop many different paths to a better life for patients, and that’s what we’re trying to do.”
A homecoming for Adams House alumsTours, talks, tributes to history and community mark celebration of six-year project to refresh space
Tours, talks, tributes to history and community mark celebration of six-year project to refresh space
Before John Adams was a president — and long before his family became the namesake for Adams House — he was a nervous incoming Harvard undergraduate.
As historian Richard Ryerson described during a recent Harvard talk, Adams was so spooked to take his College entrance exam that he almost skipped it. He decided to proceed only after thinking about the potential reactions of his father and his tutor.
Ryerson’s talk was one of many well-attended events at the 2025 Adams House Homecoming, where more than 300 alumni, tutors, and staff gathered to meet friends, pay tribute to the House history, and celebrate the end of six years of renovation.
Though Adams’ father hoped he would follow in his footsteps and join the clergy, Adams realized that wasn’t the career for him. “Fortunately, Harvard’s lively undergraduate culture soon came to the rescue of this bewildered sophomore,” Ryerson said, “as it has so often done over the centuries.” Adams discovered he was a skilled speaker. “It was whispered to me and circulated among others,” he wrote, “that I should make a better Lawyer than Divine.”
Adams’ career as a lawyer proceeded in a standard way until the Stamp Act of 1765, when he helped persuade the Massachusetts governor to reopen the Colonial courts that had been closed in protest of the tax.
His reputation as a champion for the Colonial legal system grew when he successfully defended the British soldiers charged with murder in the Boston Massacre — a defense many of his peers were unwilling to make. He later became the leading penman of the Massachusetts Patriot movement and, Ryerson argued, perhaps of all the colonies. Adams joined the first Continental Congress, edited and signed the Declaration of Independence, negotiated the Treaty of Paris, became the country’s first vice president, and ascended to the presidency.
‘There’s so much space in here that we didn’t even know about’
After the talk, attendees packed into the Gold Room, eager to explore the newly renovated space. Tours, some led by Aaron Lamport ’90, an architect on the project with his firm Beyer Blinder Belle, brought multiple generations through the House.
Lamport, as well as co-Faculty Dean Salmaan Keshavjee, emphasized that the main goals for the renovation were to restore worn facilities, improve accessibility, and expand student gathering spaces.
“There’s so much space in here that we didn’t even know about,” remarked Laura Dickinson ’92, who was visiting from Maryland. Among other new gathering spots, the former private homes of the Harvard Outing and Mountaineering clubs have been converted to gathering spaces. Lamport explained that architects wanted more House space to be available to Adams students, while the clubs moved to the Quad. “It gave them a much better place to store their kayaks,” he said.
Other rooms, like the former home of the Bow and Arrow Press, the Adams letterpress printing studio, have been remodeled as student common rooms and study spaces. (The press found a permanent home at the Harvard Library’s printing studio.)
Adams’ classic features have been refreshed. Walking down the stairs toward the Gold Room, Lamport urged visitors to look up at the Moorish dome, modeled after the Sala de Poridad in Burgos, Spain. “Many people don’t remember it,” he said, “because it was so dirty and encrusted with tobacco smoke.”
The renovation also added accessibility features, including new elevators and lifts. Those entering the Gold Room can now take an elevator upstairs leading them to the overflow dining space, outdoor seating, and the library. The dining hall itself also grew, with an expanded servery, kitchen, and seating area.
“It’s been quite a six years,” said Keshavjee, “but it’s worth it. And I think it’s going to be something that people can use for the next 100 years.”
Co-Faculty Dean Salmaan Keshavjee pauses at a portrait of Harvard graduate Franklin D. Roosevelt for whom the F.D.R. suite is named.
Leading a tour, Jed Willard points out the Moorish dome.
A student studies in one of the many recently renovated common areas.
A portrait of former Adams House Faculty Deans Judith and John Palfrey by artist William Shen ’22 (center). Shen speaks with Chukwudi Ilozue ’25 and Harvard Medical School student Eduardo Duran.
‘Fight for the diversity and beauty and the love of a community like this’
With the House itself renewed, the weekend also honored the people who shaped its spirit. In a packed Lower Common Room, hundreds gathered to honor the legacy of former Faculty Deans Judith and Sean Palfrey, both ’67, who retired from their roles after 22 years of service in 2021. The Palfreys stood alongside current faculty deans Keshavjee and Mercedes Becerra, ’91, as they revealed a new portrait by William Shen, a recent Adams House graduate and current medical student.
Shen, who was advised on the new oil painting by Harvard portraitist and alumnus Stephen Coit, ’71, M.B.A. ’77, celebrated the Palfreys for their contributions to Boston Children’s Hospital and the field of pediatrics, as well as their generous leadership of the House.
Shen was followed by a slew of other speakers — former dining hall staff, alumni, and tutors — who spoke to the Palfreys’ legacy of making everyone, regardless of background, feel at home. Ed Childs, a former union organizer and member of the dining hall staff, remarked that the Palfreys were so beloved by his union, whose meetings they hosted, that they put Judy Palfrey’s name forward as their ideal candidate for University president. “For the dining hall workers, Judy and Sean were family. They put us on the same social ladder. It showed respect,” he said.
In a closing speech, Judy Palfrey recalled a woman who approached her in Adams House, got nose-to-nose with her, and said, “You are blessed.”
“That stuck with me,” Palfrey said. “What she was saying was, being here at Harvard, being here in a House, being with the students and so forth, is an incredible blessing. And I thank God every night, actually, for that blessing, and for you, our friends.”
Sean Palfrey echoed his wife’s sentiment and encouraged people to aspire to build the type of community in their own lives that they observed in Adams House. “Go into the very diverse and also sometimes divisive world out there,” he said, “and continue to fight for the diversity and beauty and the love of a community like this.”
Clearing significant hurdle to quantum computingHarvard physicists working to develop game-changing technology demonstrate 3,000 quantum-bit system
Neng-Chun Chiu (from left), Simon Hollerith, Luke Stewart, Mikhail Lukin, Jinen (Tim) Guo, Mohamed Abobeih, and Elias Trapp.
Harvard physicists working to develop game-changing tech demonstrate 3,000 quantum-bit system capable of continuous operation
Kermit Pattison
Harvard Staff Writer
5 min read
One often-repeated example illustrates the mind-boggling potential of quantum computing: A machine with 300 quantum bits could simultaneously store more information than the number of particles in the known universe.
Now process this: Harvard scientists just unveiled a system that was 10 times bigger and the first quantum machine able to operate continuously without restarting.
In a paper published in the journal Nature, the team demonstrated a system of more than 3,000 quantum bits (or qubits) that could run for more than two hours, surmounting a series of technical challenges and representing a significant step toward building the super computers, which could revolutionize science, medicine, finance, and other fields.
“We demonstrated the continuous operation with a 3,000-qubit system,” said Mikhail Lukin, Joshua and Beth Friedman University Professor and co-director of the Quantum Science and Engineering Initiative, and senior author of the new paper. “But it’s also clear that this approach will work for much larger numbers as well.”
The Harvard-led collaboration included researchers from MIT and was jointly headed by Lukin, Markus Greiner, George Vasmer Leverett Professor of Physics, and Vladan Vuletic, Lester Wolfe Professor of Physics at MIT. The team conducts research in collaboration with QuEra Computing, a startup company spun out from Harvard-MIT labs.
Conventional computers encode information — from a video on your phone to the words and images on this page — in bits with a binary code. Quantum computers use subatomic particles in individual atoms and take advantage of counterintuitive properties of quantum physics to achieve far more processing power.
Binary conventional bits store information as zeros or ones. Qubits can be zero, one, or both at the same time — and this linear combination of amplitudes is the key to the power of quantum computing.
In conventional computers, doubling the number of bits doubles the processing power; in quantum computers, adding qubits exponentially increases the power because of a process called quantum entanglement.
But realizing large quantum systems has posed major challenges.
Systems of neutral atoms (those with no electrical charge because they have equal numbers of protons and electrons) have emerged as one of the most promising platforms for quantum computers.
But one stubborn problem has been “atom loss” — qubits escaping and losing their coded information. This shortcoming has limited experiments to one-shot efforts in which researchers must pause, reload atoms, and begin again.
“We’re showing a way where you can insert new atoms as you naturally lose them without destroying the information that’s already in the system.”
Elias Trapp
In the new study, the team devised a system to continually and rapidly resupply qubits using “optical lattice conveyor belts” (laser waves that transport atoms) and “optical tweezers” (laser beams that grab individual atoms and arrange them into grid-like arrays). The system can reload up to 300,000 atoms per second.
“We’re showing a way where you can insert new atoms as you naturally lose them without destroying the information that’s already in the system,” said Elias Trapp, the paper co-author and a Ph.D. student in the Kenneth C. Griffin School of Arts and Sciences studying physics. “That really is solving this fundamental bottleneck of atom loss.”
The new system operated an array of more than 3,000 qubits for more than two hours — and in theory, the researchers said, could continue indefinitely. Over two hours, more than 50 million atoms had cycled through the system.
Lukin added, “This new kind of continuous operation of the system, involving the ability to rapidly replace lost qubits, can be more important in practice than a specific number of qubits.”
In follow-up experiments, the team plans to apply this approach to perform computations.
Neng-Chun Chiu, study lead author and a Harvard Griffin Ph.D. student in physics, said: “What really makes us stand out is the combination of three things — the scale, preserving the quantum information, and making the whole process fast enough to be useful.”
The new study advances a fast-developing frontier of research. In fact, this week a team from Caltech published a 6,100-qubit system, but it could only run for less than 13 seconds.
In another paper also published in Nature this month, the Harvard-MIT team demonstrated an architecture for reconfigurable atom arrays to simulate exotic quantum magnets.
“We can literally reconfigure the atomic quantum computer while it’s operating. Basically, the system becomes a living organism.”
Mikhail Lukin
The approach allows the connectivity of the processor to be changed during the process of computation. In contrast, most existing computer chips — like the ones in your cellphone or desktop — have fixed connectivity.
“We can literally reconfigure the atomic quantum computer while it’s operating,” said Lukin. “Basically, the system becomes a living organism.”
In a third paper published in Nature this week, the team demonstrates a quantum architecture with new methods for error correction. With this new body of research, Lukin believes that it is now possible to envision quantum computers that can execute billions of operations and continue running for days.
“Realizing this dream is now in our direct sight for the first time, ever,” he said. “One can really see a very direct path towards realizing it.”
The researchers received federal funding from the U.S. Department of Energy, the Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity, the Army Research Office, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, and the National Science Foundation.
First study to compare two ketamine therapies for patients with severe depressionIV ketamine found to offer faster response with greater improvements
First study to compare two ketamine therapies for patients with severe depression
IV ketamine found to offer faster response with greater improvements
Mass General Brigham Communications
3 min read
In a new study, investigators compared the effects of repeated intravenous (IV) ketamine and intranasal (IN) esketamine in patients with treatment-resistant depression and found both reduced depression severity, with IV ketamine showing relatively earlier and greater improvements.
Led by researchers at Harvard-affiliated Mass General Brigham, the study was published in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. The research was based on retrospective analysis of data from 153 adult patients being treated at McLean Hospital for severe treatment-resistant depression.
Nearly 30 percent of patients with major depressive disorder fail to respond to two or more antidepressants, necessitating multiple strategies to manage their symptoms. Recently, intranasal esketamine — a subcomponent of ketamine — has emerged as a promising treatment for this challenging condition and is an FDA-approved antidepressant for adults. By contrast, IV ketamine, initially approved by the FDA as an anesthetic, remains an off-label treatment option despite decades of clinical research that demonstrates its antidepressant effects.
Researchers evaluated efficacy and rapidity of therapeutic responses in 111 patients who received IV ketamine and 42 patients who received IN esketamine, administered twice weekly over four to five weeks for a total of eight treatments during the induction treatment phase.
“We examined data naturally accumulated from patients over the course of clinical work, in one of the largest naturalistic comparison of the two drugs to date,” said corresponding author Shuang Li of the Psychiatric Neurotherapeutics Program at McLean Hospital and an instructor in psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.
Both groups showed significant overall decreases in depression severity after the final treatment compared to pretreatment baseline. IV ketamine showed greater overall efficacy, with a 49.22 percent reduction in depression scores by the final dose while IN esketamine resulted in a 39.55 percent reduction in the same period.
In addition, IV ketamine was associated with faster responses, with patients exhibiting improved symptoms immediately after the first treatment, whereas IN esketamine led to significant improvements after the second treatment.
“While I believe strongly in the utility of ketamine for the right patient in an appropriate setting, I am also very concerned about the potential for misuse and abuse of this medication,” said study first author Robert Meisner, medical director of the Ketamine Service in the Psychiatric Neurotherapeutics Program at McLean Hospital and a clinical fellow in psychiatry at HMS. “We always strive to seek evidence-based, data-driven, safety-first, care when we consider these two treatment options.”
The authors emphasize that differences in clinical contexts, as well as logistical factors like insurance coverage and the accessibility and frequency of appointments, may factor into the decision of which treatment a patient may pursue. They add that risks of ketamine misuse and the proliferation of boutique providers with varying protocols and degrees of regulation necessitate rigorous studies like these. Future randomized clinical trials are needed to confirm comparative efficacy and to eliminate confounding factors such as socioeconomic status, differences in dose and effects due to other psychiatric treatments.
Think you understand kitchen science? Our research-backed quiz will put your cooking knowledge to the test.
Our research-backed quiz will put your cooking knowledge to the test
You might look at cooking as the straightforward act of preparing food to eat, but there’s a lot more to it — and a lot of it is science. In “Science and Cooking: Physics Meets Food, From Homemade to Haute Cuisine,” Harvard chemist Pia Sörensen, applied mathematician Michael Brenner, and physicist David Weitz explore the molecular transformations that take place when we heat, cool, emulsify, and pickle our way to delicious flavors. Sörensen helped us develop this quiz so you can test your culinary know-how.