Creative output has traditionally required effort — hours spent staring down the empty page, crumpled drafts tossed in the trash. But through years or decades of dedicated toil, one could achieve mastery and derive meaning from one’s…
Category: 1. Edi-Choice
-

How to regulate artificial intelligence — Harvard Gazette
The pace of AI development is surging, and the effects on the economy, education, medicine, research, jobs, law, and lifestyle will be far-reaching and pervasive. Moves to begin regulation are surfacing on the federal and state…
Continue Reading
-

Watching history being made — Harvard Gazette
For more than two years, astronomers have been puzzled by a mysterious discovery from the ancient universe — hundreds of objects known as “little red dots” so far away the light had to travel billions of years to become visible to…
Continue Reading
-

A smell test for science — Harvard Gazette
One of the more baffling COVID symptoms is the loss of the sense of smell, which can persist long after the virus fades. According to research from Mass Eye and Ear, more than 20 million COVID patients lost smell or taste in 2021 alone. Roughly…
Continue Reading
-

Seeking a carbon-capture breakthrough— Harvard Gazette
What tricks can organic molecules be taught to help solve our planet’s biggest problems?
That’s the question driving Assistant Professor Richard Y. Liu ’15 as he pushes the frontiers of organic chemistry in pursuit of cleaner synthesis,…
Continue Reading
-

Solving evolutionary mystery of how humans came to walk upright — Harvard Gazette
The pelvis is often called the keystone of upright locomotion. More than any other part of our lower body, it has been radically altered over millions of years, allowing our ancestors to become the bipeds who trekked and settled across the…
Continue Reading
-

Seeding solutions for bipolar disorder — Harvard Gazette
Paola Arlotta holds up a vial of clear fluid swirling with tiny orbs. When she shakes her wrist, the shapes flutter like the contents of a snow globe.
“Those small spheres swirling around are actually tiny pieces of human cerebral…
Continue Reading
-

Researchers uncover surprising limit on human imagination — Harvard Gazette
Human beings can juggle up to 10 balls at once. But how many can they move through the air with their imaginations?
The answer, published last month in Nature Communications, astonished even the researchers pursuing the question. The…
Continue Reading
-

Possible clue into movement disorders like Parkinson’s, others — Harvard Gazette
Among the many wonders of the brain is its ability to master movements through practice — a dance step, piano sonata, or tying our shoes.
For decades, neuroscientists have known that these tasks require a cluster of brain areas known as the…
Continue Reading
-

‘Turning information into something physical’ — Harvard Gazette
The punched card, a paper instrument invented 300 years ago to automate looms, helped create a technology that most of us today can’t live without: computers.
A new Houghton Library exhibition — “The Punched Card from the Industrial…
Continue Reading

