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    Professor Richard Lewontin awarded the 2015 Crafoord Prize in Biosciences

    The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the 2015 Crafoord Prize in Biosciences to Richard Lewontin, professor of biology, emeritus, and Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology in the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Emeritus. The award was given for his pioneering analysis and fundamental contributions to the understanding of genetic polymorphism. Lewontin shares the prize with Tomoko Ohta…

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    Michael Mitzenmacher and Stuart Shieber named 2014 ACM fellows

    Michael Mitzenmacher and Stuart Shieber, faculty members at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), are among 47 leading computer scientists named 2014 fellows of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). The 2014 ACM fellows have been selected by their peers on the basis of their contributions to key computing fields, including database…

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    Shorenstein Center announces spring 2015 fellows

    The Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School is pleased to announce the appointment of their spring 2015 fellows. “The line-up of Shorenstein Fellows for the spring semester is a group of all-stars – every one of them,” said Alex S. Jones, the center’s director. Shorenstein Center Fellows spend the…

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    David Mooney receives grant to develop animal contraceptive vaccine

    The Gary Michelson Found Animals Foundation has awarded Harvard bioengineer David Mooney a three-year grant totaling more than $700,000 to pursue development of a vaccine technology that would provide a nonsurgical method for spaying and neutering dogs and cats. Mooney is the Robert P. Pinkas Family Professor of Bioengineering at the Harvard School of Engineering…

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    The heat is on: Causes of hospitalization due to heat waves identified

    In the largest and most comprehensive study of heat-related illness to date, Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) researchers have identified a handful of potentially serious disorders—including fluid and electrolyte disorders, renal failure, urinary tract infections, sepsis, and heat stroke—that put older Americans at significantly increased risk of winding up in the hospital during periods…

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    Three join National Academy of Inventors

    Richard McCullough, Harvard’s vice provost for research and a professor of materials science and engineering in the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), has been named a fellow of the National Academy of Inventors, along with two of his Harvard colleagues. David A. Evans, a research professor and former chairman of the University’s Department…

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    PTSD doubles diabetes risk in women

    Women with post-traumatic stress disorder are nearly twice as likely to develop type 2 diabetes compared with women who don’t have PTSD, according to researchers at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University. The longitudinal cohort study provides the strongest evidence to date of a causal…

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    Fine particulate air pollution linked with increased autism risk

    Women exposed to high levels of fine particulate matter specifically during pregnancy—particularly during the third trimester—may face up to twice the risk of having a child with autism than mothers living in areas with low particulate matter, according to a new study from Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH). The greater the exposure, the greater…

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    Radhika Nagpal, expert on swarm robotics, celebrated among ‘Nature’s 10’

    Radhika Nagpal, the Harvard computer scientist whose self-organizing swarm robotics are today’s state of the art in collective artificial intelligence, has been named among Nature’s 10, the ten scientists and engineers who “made a difference” in 2014. Nagpal is the Fred Kavli Professor of Computer Science at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences…

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    Swapping veggies for meat a healthier choice

    Numerous studies since the 1960s have linked consumption of red meat to an increased risk of breast and colon cancer, type 2 diabetes,cardiovascular disease, and other conditions, Walter Willett, Fredrick John Stare professor of epidemiology and nutrition and chair of the Department of Nutrition at Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH), said in a webinar…

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    Pforzheimer Fellowships program renewed

    Following a successful program launch this year, the Harvard Library will welcome its second cohort of Pforzheimer Fellows in the summer of 2015. The program, which seeks to foster intellectual and professional partnerships between professional librarians and graduate students in the humanities, is named in honor of Carl H. Pforzheimer III and his generous contributions…

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    A cross-disciplinary approach to eradicating malaria

    There is an arsenal of cost-effective tools available to combat malaria but getting people to adhere to treatment regimens can be challenging, said Jessica Cohen, assistant professor of global health, at a symposium focused on “The Last Mile to Malaria Eradication,” held December 4, 2014 in Kresge G3. It was sponsored by the Department of…

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    New standards for sustainable building systems

    Harvard has released the latest version of its Green Building Standards, aimed at building healthier, more efficient buildings across campus. The Standards, which apply to all capital projects, are a key tool for helping the University meet its Greenhouse Gas Reduction Goal through the design and construction of sustainable building spaces. An associated Life Cycle Cost policy ensures…

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    Winter Faculty Academy offers bootcamp for online learning

    The Office of the Vice Provost for Advances in Learning is sponsoring a program called the Faculty Academy to enable full-time Harvard faculty to get hands-on assistance with some of the techniques and concepts used in online learning experiences (such as those created through HarvardX) and in blended or flipped classrooms. Topics covered include: Video…

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    On the ground: Alumnus battles the nightmare in Liberia

    As the deadly infection rages through West Africa, faculty, students, and alumni are waging a counterattack: on the ground, in the lab, on the humanitarian front, and in the political sphere. A special report by Harvard Public Health editor Madeline Drexler. The first Ebola case that Mosoka Fallah saw with his own eyes was in…

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    Turkish journalist Hasan Cemal to receive Louis Lyons Award at Nieman

    Nieman Fellows in the class of 2015 have selected prominent Turkish journalist and writer Hasan Cemal as this year’s recipient of the Louis M. Lyons Award for Conscience and Integrity in Journalism. Cemal was chosen in recognition of a long career dedicated to championing freedom of the press in Turkey and as a representative of…

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    HSPH faculty member, alumnus, among Ebola fighters named Time’s ‘Person of the Year’

    Pardis Sabeti, associate professor in the Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases at Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH), and Mosoka Fallah, M.P.H. ’12, were among the Ebola fighters — doctors, nurses, caregivers, scientists, and directors — named Time’s 2014 “Person of the Year.” Sabeti, who also is a senior associate member at the Broad…

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    Tazuko Ajiro-Monane and Noma-Reischauer Prizes awarded to students

    Students and faculty convened to honor and celebrate the recipients of this year’s Tazuko Ajiro-Monane Award and Noma-Reichauer Prizes in Japanese Studies. The event, co-sponsored by the Japanese Language Program and the Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies (with support from the Tazuko Ajiro Monane Memorial Fund), was well attended, with appearances from Jenni Ting, last…

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    Getting to universal health coverage

    Julio Frenk is dean of the Faculty at the Harvard School of Public Health and T & G Angelopoulos Professor of Public Health and International Development, a joint appointment with the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. What does it take to develop a successful universal health coverage program in a state or a country? When…

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    Simple preventive measures may help stem Ebola

    The rush to contain the Ebola outbreak in West Africa in the last few months has generated years’ worth of new information about the previously little understood infectious disease, including simple but effective prevention measures, according to Lindsey Baden, deputy editor of the New England Journal of Medicine and member of the Harvard-MIT Division of…

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    Probing genes for disease risk

    New research by Alkes Price, associate professor of Statistical Genetics at Harvard School of Public Health, and colleagues focuses on new approaches to characterizing and identifying genetic factors in complex disease. HSPH: What’s the basic finding of your new research? PRICE: Our study could help scientists determine the best way to search for genetic risk factors…

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    Getting a detailed picture of Ebola

    The Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT is now “the world’s most powerful factory for analyzing genes from people and viruses,” according to an article in the New York Times, published December 1, 2014. The article highlighted the work of Pardis Sabeti, a senior associate member at the Broad, associate professor in the Department of…

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    In memoriam: Dimitrios Trichopoulos, ‘giant’ in cancer epidemiology

    Dimitrios Trichopoulos, who was Vincent L. Gregory Professor of Cancer Prevention and Professor of Epidemiology, and a past chair of the Department of Epidemiology, died on December 1, 2014. He was 75. Dimitrios was an outstanding scientist and teacher for more than four decades in the field of cancer epidemiology and prevention. He published more…

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    Lamont Tumblr announced

    Lamonsters may sound like something that goes bump in the night, but they’re actually just library fans. The moniker refers to followers of Lamont Library’s latest endeavor to virtually reach its patrons — its new Tumblr page. Following the example of successful forays onto the image-based social media platform by Houghton and Widener libraries, Lamont staff…

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    Boosting comprehensive women’s health care in Sub-Saharan Africa

    To stem the spread of HIV among women in Sub-Saharan Africa and to boost their overall health and the health of their families, it’s crucial to improve not just HIV care but also reproductive and maternal health services — and to knit the services together — according to a series of new papers in the…

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    Poll finds many in Massachusetts have firsthand experience with a medical error

    This year marks the twentieth anniversary of the tragic death of Betsy Lehman, a health care reporter for the Boston Globe. She died from a medical error during her hospital treatment in Massachusetts. A new poll conducted in Massachusetts two decades later finds that the problem of medical errors still exists, with nearly one in…

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    First HarvardX learning technology challenge wraps up

    Last September, HarvardX, the University-wide strategic initiative to enable faculty to build open online learning experiences and to conduct research, invited creative coders from around the world to a learning technology challenge. The task to create an interactive visualization of the binomial distribution was met with enthusiasm, as the winning entry would find its way into online courses…

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    Harvard second in the US in scholarly output on library and information sciences

    According to a recent study by Thomson Reuters, Harvard is one of the top universities in the United States for scholarly output in library and information science, contributing the second-highest number of papers to academic journals in the field between 2009 and 2013. Indiana, the top school on the list, has its own library and information science…

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    Digitization gives Slavic materials new life

    The thrill of an unearthing a long-forgotten treasure in the stacks is a private joy for most, but library staff get the added thrill of bringing the materials to a wider audience through digitization, as Slavic librarian Anna Rakityanskaya well knows. Rakityanskaya recently spearheaded a project to bring unique materials online after making her own…

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    Library Lab celebrates people and projects at program’s close

    November marked the close of Library Lab, one of the Harvard Library’s more inventive programs from recent years. Participants and supporters from across the University recently came together to celebrate their accomplishments. The project drew together Harvard’s technologists and humanists with the mandate to experiment, build and test out their ideas aimed at improving library…