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    Singer named Norwood Award recipient

    Judith D. Singer, senior vice provost for Faculty Development and Diversity and the James Bryant Conant Professor of Education, is the recipient of the 13th annual Janet L. Norwood Award for Outstanding Achievement by a Woman in the Statistical Sciences, The University of Alabama at Birmingham announced last week. Singer is an internationally renowned statistician…

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    HarvardX Interactive Learning Challenge now open

    HarvardX invites creative coders everywhere to a learning technology challenge. The mission is to create an interactive visualization of the binomial distribution suitable for students who are learning the topic of probability. Possible approaches include interactive line or bar graphs, coin-flip or dice-roll simulations, combinations of these, or something completely different. Winners will see their work appear in…

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    Jonathan Haber appointed the inaugural HarvardX Visiting Fellow

    Jonathan Haber, the lifelong learner behind Degree of Freedom and author of MOOCs: The Essential Guide, has been appointed the inaugural HarvardX Visiting Fellow. He begins his six month appointment in September. Haber will immerse himself in the organization, focusing in particular on helping the learning and research teams develop better, more robust, and effective online assessments. In…

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    Poll finds many in U.S. lack knowledge about Ebola and its transmission

    Although the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports no known cases of Ebola transmission in the United States, a Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH)/SSRS poll released August 21, 2014 shows that four-in-ten (39 percent) adults in the U.S. are concerned that there will be a large outbreak in the U.S., and a quarter (26 percent) are concerned…

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    Undergraduates get taste of public health in summer programs

    In only two months as an intern in a lab at Harvard School of Public Health, Erika Espinosa believes she learned more than she could have in a semester of undergraduate courses. The Summer Program in Biological Sciences in Public Health (BPH), Espinosa said, “taught me the real definition of hard work” as she performed molecular…

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    Public health politician

    When she was running for a seat in Japan’s house of representatives, Mayuko Toyota, SM ’02, one day found herself standing in the rain on crutches, giving a speech at a common venue for politicking in that country: outside the train station. “I might have looked miserable,” she said, explaining that an injury had her hobbling around…

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    Reducing wasteful health care spending begs the question, what is waste?

    The U.S. spends more than $2.8 trillion on health care each year, and some estimate that 30% of that price tag may be waste. To promote more effective use of health care resources, a group of national organizations representing medical specialists are working to identify procedures and tests that may be overused. The Choosing Wisely initiative, sponsored by the American Board of…

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    HLS students successfully advocate for safe schools law

    For the past year, Harvard Law students in the Education Law Clinic have travelled back and forth to the Massachusetts State House to lobby state legislators to pass an Act Relative to Safe and Supportive Schools. On August 13, all that work paid off, when Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick signed the Safe and Supportive Schools…

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    Balskus named Innovator Under 35

    Assistant Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology Emily Balskus has been named an Innovator Under 35 by the MIT Technology Review. Each year since 1999, editors of the review have selected exceptionally talented young innovators whose work they believe has the greatest potential to transform the world. Balskus uses a variety of approaches, including advanced DNA sequencing,…

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    Inside the cell, an ocean of buffeting waves

    Conventional wisdom holds that the cytoplasm of mammalian cells is a viscous fluid, with organelles and proteins suspended within it, jiggling against one another and drifting at random. However, a new biophysical study led by researchers at Harvard University challenges this model and reveals that those drifting objects are subject to a very different type…

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    Science & Cooking lecture series returns Sept. 8

    Harvard’s popular Science & Cooking lecture series will return on Sept. 8, bringing world-class chefs and eminent food experts to campus for weekly talks and demonstrations that are open to the public. Most of the guests and topics this year will be entirely new, as the series welcomes for the first time the internationally renowned…

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    Harvard and MIT researchers reflect on open data in MOOCs

    A follow-up study led by a joint team of Harvard and MIT researchers explores the promise and perils of de-identifying learner data from MOOCs (massive open online courses) and offers recommendations of how to balance privacy with open data. The dataset (made available in May) contains the original learning data from the 16 HarvardX and MITx courses…

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    Caffeine may reduce women’s tinnitus risk

    Women who consume higher amounts of caffeine may have a lower risk of developing tinnitus — a steady ringing in the ear — than women who consume less, according to a new study by a Harvard School of Health (HSPH) researcher and colleagues. Most of the 65,000 women in the 18-year study got their caffeine from coffee; those…

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    Physics students introduce open, collaborative annotation tool

    Physics graduate students Erik Bauch and Georg Kucsko have developed an online tool, Open Rev., for collaborative annotation of scientific publications. Open Rev. enables open discussion about scholarly works, independent of publishers, on a free platform that is easily accessible. Users can upload a paper, highlight specific sections and generate related questions, which are then…

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    GSD alumna appointed dean of Columbia grad school

    Graduate School of Design alumna Amale Andraos has been appointed dean of Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation (GSAPP). An associate professor at GSAPP and a principal at the New York-based firm WORKac, Andraos is a leading voice on urbanism and globalization, and related environmental and social concerns. She has worked on such…

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    Food for thought at Schlesinger and University Archives

    The Harvard University Archives and Schlesinger Library opened their doors to a display of food-related items. While recipes abounded, a few items took the cake, including Julia Child’s Emmy award, a sketch of an epic 1818 Harvard dining hall food fight and china used at Harvard in the 19th century. The Archives’ display was but…

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    Harvard Judaica in the 21st century

    The Judaica Division’s latest publication — “Harvard Judaica in the 21st Century” by Charles Berlin — was recently published to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Division. In 1962 the Division was established with the appointment of Charles Berlin, Lee M. Friedman Bibliographer in Judaica and Head of the Division. Alan Garber, Harvard’s provost, noted in his…

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    Tozzer Library reopens in newly renovated building

    Tozzer Library returned to an entirely rebuilt and redesigned space following two years in temporary quarters. The original Tozzer Library building  was almost completely demolished and rebuilt and enlarged to reunite Harvard’s anthropological community for the first time in over 50 years. Tozzer is connected to the Peabody Museum, where some Anthropology Department offices continue…

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    Robert Flaherty film re-discovered at Houghton Library

    A film by pioneering director Robert J. Flaherty — which film historians believed to have been lost — was rediscovered at Harvard’s Houghton Library. The short film “Oidhche Sheanchais” (“A Night of Storytelling”) was created by Flaherty in 1935 during the production of his now-classic film “Man of Aran.” The nitrate print of “Oidhche Sheanchais” was…

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    Quality missing from global health agenda

    Today, more people than ever have health insurance. In the U.S., millions have signed up for coverage since the 2008 passage of the Affordable Care Act. Globally, there’s a high level of interest in establishing universal health coverage in countries without it. It’s expected that the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals—a set of new worldwide goals for 2015 and beyond—will…

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    ZIP code better predictor of health than genetic code

    In St. Louis, Missouri, Delmar Boulevard marks a sharp dividing line between the poor, predominately African American neighborhood to the north and a more affluent, largely white neighborhood to the south. Education and health also follow the “Delmar Divide,” with residents to the north less likely to have a bachelor’s degree and more likely to…

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    Two named Damon Runyon Fellows

    The Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation, a non-profit organization focused on supporting innovative early career researchers, awarded 16 new Damon Runyon Fellows at its May 2014 Fellowship Award Committee meeting, including Harvard’s Avinash Khanna and Sungwook. The recipients of this prestigious, four-year award are outstanding postdoctoral scientists conducting basic and translational cancer research in the…

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    APS elects three from Harvard

    The American Philosophical Society (APS) recently elected 28 new members, including three Harvard faculty members: Richard J. Tarrant, Pope Professor of the Latin Language and Literature, Jill Lepore, David Woods Kemper ’41 Professor of American History and Rem Koolhaas, professor in practice of architecture and urban design at the Harvard Graduate School of Design.   An…

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    Growth, size of babies worldwide remarkably similar

    Ana Langer, director of the Women and Health Initiative and Maternal Health Task Force (MHTF) at Harvard School of Public Health, says that new findings from an international study on fetal growth and birth length debunk longstanding beliefs that variations among fetal and infant sizes have something to do with genetics, race, or ethnicity. The consortium that produced this study —…

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    Science and Cooking for Kids a recipe for success

    In many cases, when you bring a room full of pre-teens together, in the summer, to talk about math and science – you don’t hear squeals of excitement. But then this was no ordinary class. This was the highly popular Science and Cooking for Kids, a week-long, free program that is developed and run by…

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    Minuscule chips for NMR spectroscopy promise portability, parallelization

    A team of engineers at theHarvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), Schlumberger-Doll Research Center in Cambridge, Mass., and the University of Texas, Austin, have created a truly portable device for nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. NMR spectroscopy is a technique that perturbs protons within a molecule to glean important clues about its structure.…

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    James R. Rice to receive ASCE Theodore von Karman Medal

    James R. Rice, Mallinckrodt Professor of Engineering Sciences and Geophysics at Harvard’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, has been selected to receive the Theodore von Karman Medal of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE). The Engineering Mechanics Institute, part of ASCE, presents the von…

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    New faculty directors named in Graduate Commons Programs

    Campus Services and Harvard University Housing recently announced the appointment of Professor Christopher Winship and his wife, Nancy K. Winship, as the newest faculty directors within the Graduate Commons Program. They will take up residence in 29 Garden Street next spring, and will begin hosting events for graduate students and other Harvard affiliates in the…

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    Fall into HarvardX with new and returning courses

    HarvardX is offering a host of new and returning open online courses this fall. Visualizing Japan (9/3) A first-time MITx/HarvardX collaboration, VJx opens windows on Japan’s transition into the modern world through the historical visual record. Poetry in America: Module 1: New England (9/10) This course, the first installment of the multi-part Poetry in America series, covers American poetry…

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    Roma in Europe face prejudice, exclusion, hate crimes

    The Roma in Europe are increasingly subject to racism, social exclusion, trafficking, and violence, in spite of efforts by European Union institutions to uphold Roma human rights, according to a new article by researchers at Harvard School of Public Health’s FXB Center for Health and Human Rights. Europe’s Roma population “constitutes the poorest, most stigmatized, and excluded population within the…