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    Ted Johnson to participate in White House Fellows program

    Active duty Navy Commander and 2011 Harvard Extension School Master of Liberal Arts (A.L.M.) grad Ted Johnson has been selected to participate in the prestigious White House Fellows program. Of the 15 chosen to participate, more than half hold degrees from Harvard, with Johnson being the first Harvard Extension School graduate selected for the program.…

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    Arboretum and Boston Teachers Union School partner for science education

    Growing out of a longstanding commitment to sharing knowledge about the natural world, the Arnold Arboretum’s educational programming for children began in the 1980s with the introduction of field study opportunities in the historical landscape. While this programming continues to thrive today, the Arboretum’s Boston Teachers Union School collaboration is designed to provide science instruction…

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    Hybrid & Alt Vehicle Showcase at SEAS on 2/15

    As part of the Harvard College General Education course Science of the Physical Universe 24: “Introduction to Technology & Society,” students and members of the Harvard community are invited to check out market ready alternative vehicle technologies in automobiles that are presently being sold. Day & Time: Wed, Feb. 15, 1-2:30 p.m. Location: In front…

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    SEAS’s Katia Bertoldi wins Faculty Early Career Development Award

    Katia Bertoldi, assistant professor of applied mechanics at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), has won a Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award from the National Science Foundation (NSF). The honor is considered one of the most prestigious for up-and-coming researchers in science and engineering. Bertoldi’s research involves the use of continuum…

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    Jeffrey Schnapp leads new approach to research in the arts and humanities

    As revolutionaries go — and he is one, embracing a dynamic new conception of humanistic research in the digital age — Jeffrey Schnapp is really quite grounded. He’s a medievalist, for one thing, a Dante scholar with impeccable credentials and a long track record in all the traditional scholarly forms. And although he founded a…

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    Ash Center devotes $350,000 in grants to exploring democracy’s challenges

    From exploring citizen participation in rural China to assessing how public deliberations in California can engage citizens, HKS’s Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation continues to be at the forefront of understanding democracy’s challenges. In early February 2012, the Center announced a deepened commitment to studying democracy by devoting $350,000 each year to faculty…

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    Whole-genome sequencing of 2011 E. coli outbreaks in Europe provides new insight

    Using whole-genome sequencing, a team led by researchers from Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) and the Broad Institute has traced the path of the E. coli outbreak that sickened thousands and killed more than 50 people in Germany in summer 2011 and also caused a smaller outbreak in France. It is one of the…

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    Omega-3s tied to lower risk of irregular heartbeat

    People with higher-than-average levels of omega-3 fatty acids in their blood may be roughly 30 percent less likely than those with the lowest levels to develop atrial fibrillation, according to new Harvard School of Public Health research. Atrial fibrillation is a dangerous condition that tends to strike the elderly and can lead to stroke or…

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    Searching for answers to causes of childhood depression

    Over the past decade, scientists have produced a flurry of studies exploring the role of genetic (nature) and environmental factors (nurture) in youth depression, but there has been little consensus on how depression is jointly impacted by specific genes and external factors, such as poverty, abuse, and negative family relationships. The lack of a clear…

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    Composer Curran gives 2012 Louis C. Elson Lecture Feb. 28

    Alvin Curran will bring his thoughts and experiences to Harvard as the Louis C. Elson Lecturer, and will talk about his uncommon music and life on Tuesday, Feb. 28, at 5:15 p.m. in John Knowles Paine Concert Hall on the Harvard University campus (Harvard Square Red Line T stop). Paine Hall is wheelchair accessible, and…

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    SEAS graduate student awarded Facebook Fellowship

    Facebook certainly “likes” Gregory Malecha, a Ph.D. candidate in computer science at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS). The social media giant awarded Malecha a 2012-13 Facebook Fellowship. As a fellow, he will enjoy fully paid tuition and fees for the academic year. He will also receive a $30,000 stipend, money towards…

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    “Flipped classroom” teaching model gains an online community

    Researchers at Harvard University have launched the Peer Instruction (PI) Network, a new global social network for users of interactive teaching methods. PI, developed by Eric Mazur, area dean for applied physics and Balkanski Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), is an innovative evidence-based pedagogy…

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    Arboretum’s Weld Hill Research Building awarded LEED certification

    The Arnold Arboretum is pleased to announce that the Weld Hill Research Building has been awarded LEED Gold in assessments established by the U.S. Green Building Council and verified by the Green Building Certification Institute. Opened in January 2011, the Arboretum’s research and administration facility at Weld Hill was designed and constructed to LEED (Leadership…

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    Harvard Kennedy School faculty reflect on the World Economic Forum

    Europe’s financial crisis dominated the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) annual meeting, which wrapped up Sunday (January 29) in Davos, Switzerland. For the first time, growing wealth disparities were a main topic of discussion, thanks largely to the Arab Spring uprisings, the Occupy movement and other protests around the globe. More than 2,500 VIPs, including Harvard…

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    Harvard researchers to receive high-performance computing grants

    Seven Harvard-affiliated researchers will receive grants to support collaborative projects in high-performance computing. The seed grants, awarded by the Massachusetts Green High Performance Computing Center (MGHPCC) under construction in Holyoke, Mass., are intended to support projects in computational science that advance basic knowledge, create new practical applications, and accelerate the development of faster and more…

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    GSAS adopts electronic submission of the dissertation

    Until now, a key part of receiving a Ph.D. from Harvard was taking a cab ride to a factory in Charlestown (it was not T-accessible) to have your dissertation bound. Now that scenic journey is a thing of the past. After a pilot program launched by GSAS to great success among March degree candidates, all…

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    Grant expands Dana-Farber’s cancer imaging research program

    The Massachusetts Life Sciences Center has awarded Harvard-affiliated Dana-Farber Cancer Institute a $10 million grant to support the expansion of its pioneering cancer imaging research program. The MLSC grant will help fund the establishment of the Molecular Cancer Imaging Facility, a $20 million research initiative to develop new molecular imaging probes. The facility will ultimately…

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    Dean’s Distinguished Lecture: Design public health initiatives with users in mind

    Whether drafting a plan to help patients make healthier food choices or designing an electronic medical records system, the more public health professionals know about the personal preferences of those who will use the end product, the more likely the initiative will be successful, Patrick Whitney (pictured at right), told an overflow HSPH audience January…

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    Limiting certain nutrients before surgery may reduce risk of surgical complications

    Limiting certain essential nutrients for several days before surgery—either protein or amino acids—may reduce the risk of serious surgical complications such as heart attack or stroke, according to a new Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) study. The study appears in the January 25, 2012 issue of Science Translational Medicine. “Food restriction as a way…

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    Cross the board cuts to Medicare are not the answer

    The Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services recently announced a scheduled cut in physician fees for 2012 using a sustainable growth rate (SGR) formula, which determines annual adjustments to payments for services. The SGR formula was implemented in 1998 to curb the growth in expenditures on physicians’ services. In a new paper, “The Sources of the…

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    After the Cold War: The impact of Soviet èmigrès on the Mathematics Academy

    The end of the Cold War brought great changes across the political and economic landscapes. But it also affected the academic world in significant ways. In a new research paper titled “The Collapse of the Soviet Union and the Productivity of American Mathematicians,” which is to be published in a forthcoming issue of the Quarterly…

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    Funding “knowledge gaps” and increasing patient involvement top concerns

    The field of comparative effectiveness research, which aims to determine the most effective medical treatments, has drawn criticism from those who believe that it will lead to health care rationing. Now, the nongovernmental board created by the health care reform law to oversee comparative effectiveness research funding— The Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI)—has released a…

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    A new opportunity for student input on College alcohol policy

    Following a host of public meetings during the fall semester, Harvard College is offering undergraduates another chance to help define the College alcohol policy’s underlying principles. Working with the Office of Student Life (OSL), the committee charged by Dean Evelynn M. Hammonds with revising the College alcohol policy will open an online focus group to…

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    Arboretum heralds new USDA Hardiness Zone Map

    This week, the U.S. Department of Agriculture unveiled its new Plant Hardiness Zone Map (PHZM), a development that has been long anticipated by gardeners and researchers. Like its earlier incarnations, the new PHZM provides guidelines to predict a region’s average annual minimum temperature, a vital statistic in determining whether or not a plant may survive…

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    Transmission/Transformation: Sounding China in Enlightenment Europe

    All eyes are turned toward China, as it continuously grows in global importance. This phenomenon may have a contemporary ring to it, but the eighteenth century was equally enthralled by the Middle Kingdom. Everything about the distant empire was fascinating to the western world, including its music. Fanny Peabody Professor of Music Alexander Rehding, in…

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    Prevent “toxic stress” in childhood to offset lifelong problems

    “Toxic stress,” or adversity, in early childhood can lead to a lifetime of mental and physical problems—including disruption of the body’s metabolism or brain development —and pediatricians should take a leading role in providing care that addresses the problem, according to two reports in the journal Pediatrics co-authored by Jack P. Shonkoff, Julius B. Richmond…

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    The information revolution

    In today’s economy data is power. “Open data leveraged by networks is the fuel that powers important decisions at each level of society,” writes Vivek Kundra, “from government to business to community to households.” In a new Shorenstein Center discussion paper titled “Digital Fuel of the 21st Century: Innovation through Open Data and the Network Effect,” Kundra…

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    Are presidential primary debates working?

    Mark McKinnon wonders if the course of history would have been altered had P.T. Barnum moderated the famed Lincoln-Douglas debate in 1858, implying that today’s political debates are a bit of a circus. In his new research paper, “Gone Rogue: Time to Reform Presidential Primary Debates,” the author asks: Does the current primary debate process…

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    Do better test scores indicate better teaching?

    Many school administrators, parents and policymakers advocate on behalf of improving the quality of teaching, but there is much debate over how best to do it. One method of evaluating teachers is based on students’ test scores, commonly referred to as the “value added” (VA) approach. But there are two fundamental questions about this approach.…

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    Belfer Center and CID among top three university think tanks

    Two Harvard Kennedy School research centers have been recognized as among the best think tanks in the world. The Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs is ranked number one and the Center for International Development (CID) as the third best university-related think tank in the 2011 Global Go To Think Tanks Index, released on…