September 2010

Three MIT alumni—a linguist, an economist, and an astrophysicist—have won 2010 MacArthur Fellowships, and that’s out of 23 total. Besides the honor of the so-called genius grants, each fellow receives a $500,000 prize to use as they like.

Jessie Little Doe Baird

Jessie Little Doe Baird

Linguist Jessie Little Doe Baird SM ’00, head of the Wôpanâak Language Reclamation Project in Mashpee, MA, is working to revive the language starting with her own daughter, who is fluent. Wôpanâak, an Algonquian language, was once spoken on Cape Cod, where Baird is deeply involved in affairs of the Mashpee tribe, part of the Wampanoag nation. Each summer Baird leads a weeklong language immersion camp. She is developing educational materials including children’s books and she and MIT Prof. Norvin Richards PhD ‘97 are writing a dictionary, now up to about 10, 000 words.

Emmanuel Saez

Emmanuel Saez

Emmanuel Saez PhD ’99, an economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and director of its Center for Equitable Growth, focuses his research on wealth and income inequality, capital income taxation, and retirement. He and colleagues worldwide have designed high-resolution methods for measuring changes in income patterns through time and determining how taxation affects income and savings. His recent honors include the American Economic Association’s John Bates Clark Medal, which is given annually to America’s most outstanding economist under 40.

Mavalvala

Nergis Mavalvala

MIT Professor of Physics Nergis Mavalvala PhD ’97, a quantum astrophysicist, focuses on detecting gravitational waves created in the violent collisions of stars and in the earliest moments of the universe. “Everything we know about the universe, both nearby and distant, comes from measuring light,” said Mavalvala. “Gravitational waves are another messenger. Being able to look into the universe with that completely new tool, we should learn new and enormously interesting things.

MIT also scored big last year with four MacArthur fellows out of 24 total. MIT economist Esther Duflo PhD ’99, director of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab, won for research that has helped change the way governments and aid organizations address global poverty.

Other 2009 winners included Peter Huybers PhD ’04 for research that helps explain changes in the earth’s climate over the past 1.8 million years; John A. Rogers PhD ’95 for his work developing flexible semiconductors; and Daniel Sigman PhD ’97 whose research illuminates the effects of oceanic biomass on the earth’s climate over the past two million years.

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On September 23, dozens of people from the MIT community chronicled their day in photographs, snapping shots from 12:01 a.m. until 11:59 p.m. What resulted was a mishmash of images from students, staff, and faculty members that, taken together, gives viewers a sense of what life is like at MIT–not just the big events and sweeping landscapes, but the day to day, mundane details that comprise regular life. Slice combed through and picked some pictures, which are presented below. To see more images from the project, including a breakdown of photos by photographer and time, visit http://aditl.mit.edu/2010/front. Props to the project’s sponsors: Technique, the Yearbook, and Photography Club of MIT.

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Photo of metalwork from the Discover Product Design program

Photo of an aluminum DPD keychain that was produced in under a minute on the Hobby Shop's waterjet machine: Jared Katz '14. Hand model: Josh Velasquez '08.

Before freshman orientation begins, incoming students have the option of taking one of numerous Freshman Preorientation Programs, designed to help them learn more about themselves and offerings at MIT, explore Boston and Cambridge, and develop friendships with fellow freshmen, current students, and faculty. Students built and programmed a LEGO robot, tried out the new 3D printers and laser cutters in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering labs, learned about urban development, volunteered in the local community, and built an underwater vehicle then deployed it in an actual ocean environment at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, to name just some of the activities.

In the Discover Product Design program, which is run by members of the MIT Ideation Lab, a mechanical engineering research group studying early-stage design processes, new students visited local design firms, museums, and campus labs and engaged in some design projects of their own. They also documented the entire experience after learning some basic photo composition tips on day one. Photography was stressed as a useful skill in creating a design portfolio and in documenting ethnographic research to inform the design process. At the end of five days, the 22 students each submitted five photos that best captured the program. Co-coordinators Justin Lai ’07, SM ’09 (a PhD student) and Josh Velasquez ’08 then selected a few from each to create a photo essay. A couple of the images are below. View the complete essay in chronological order or each student’s portfolio.

Clear plastic hand with brass rat created for the Discover Product Design program

Photo of Kristopher Swick '12 by Daniel Gonzalez '14.

Photo from the Discover Product Design program

Photo: Sashko Stubailo '14.

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Missed Technology Review’s annual gathering of leading thinkers pondering emerging technologies? No problem! You can watch EmTech@MIT 2010 sessions online to catch new ideas about moving discoveries from lab to market, evolving global communications, and the future of fuels and transportation.

TR head Jason Pontin introduces EmTech 2010 videos.

TR head Jason Pontin introduces EmTech 2010 videos.

In addition to keynotes, panels, fireside chats, and demos at the Sept. 21-23, 2010, conference, you can also watch elevator pitches by the TR35, the rising young innovators honored this year, read about the MIT-affiliated ones, and see which was tapped as the winner. Check the agenda to spot speakers or topics of interest.

A few highlights

  • Lab to Market: Success is Not Final, Failure is Not Fatal—panel includes Lili Cheng from Microsoft’s Future Social Experiences Labs, Nitin Parekh of Palo Alto Research Center, and others (in partnership with the MIT Enterprise Forum).
  • Mobile Augmented Reality and the Future of Play—demo shows how interactive 3D experiences can be visualized on real-world surfaces.
  • The Future of Mobile—Vanu Bose ’88, SM ’92, PhD ’99, president and CEO, Vanu, Inc.; Matt Grob, SVP, Corporate Research and Development, Qualcomm; and others.
  • What’s Ahead in Wireless: Revolutionizing the Way We Do Business— Dan Hesse SM ’89, Sprint CEO, predicts the impact of wireless technology advances.
  • The Future of Computation—Stephen Wolfram, founder and CEO, Wolfram Research, describes how his latest innovation changes the dynamics of search.
  • The Future of Transportation—Ryan Chin MA ’00, SM ’04, Media Lab Smart Cities research group, comments on urban mobility and the CityCar.
  • Fireside Chats—Jason Pontin talks with University of Chicago Professor Elisabeth Moyer about CIM-EARTH, Christine Herron of First Round Capital about emerging IT technologies, and others.

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Professor Patrick Henry Winston ’65, SM ’67, PhD ’70

Once an acquaintance, classically educated, asked me if I had read Thucydides. He knew I went to MIT, so I think he was hoping and expecting me to say “Who’s Thucydides.”

But I said, “Of course, and I especially like the way Thucydides handled detail in his description of the investiture of Syracuse.”

He changed the subject.

In the old days, freshmen and sophomores were all empowered by taking the same four humanities subjects, which started with the Odyssey and concluded with the French revolution. Some sections met on Saturday mornings. Everybody read the same books at the same time. Just about everyone who took those subjects has fond memories of them.

Many of the instructors were Harvard students working on their PhD dissertations. Many of the students had parents who had emigrated from Europe. We joked that the four courses centered on Christian traditions taught by atheists to Jews.

Alas, those subjects are no more, and now everyone is free to pursue specific interests in the humanities, where specific interest is often severely limited by accidents of schedule conflict.

In thinking about how MIT should change, it occurred to me that we ought to have, say, two subjects centered on Great Science and Great Engineering.

Like our back-in-the-day humanities subjects, these subjects would be taken by all the
freshmen.  Also, they would focus on original sources, starting in the first
semester with a common core of great classics—such as Einstein’s paper on the
photo-electric effect and Watson and Crick’s two-page paper announcing the structure of
DNA.  In the second semester, individual sections could veer off toward biology,
physics, computer science, mechanical engineering, and so on.  Students with a
scientific and engineering gene would be inspired.  Those without one would find out
fast.

So I wrote up a prospectus, complete with sections on benefits for students, benefits for
the faculty, content, and assignments.

Of course, as I wrote, I knew there are lots of reasons why such subjects will never be
taught.  I even knew some reasons why they would be a bad idea.

But I once visited Arcosanti, the experimental town in the Arizona desert conceived and promoted by Paolo Soleri. I was particularly impressed by an exhibit of architectural models of buildings designed by architects who knew they were too out-of-the-box ever to be built. I suppose they were designed partly for fun and partly for discussion.

That’s why I wrote up a prospectus.  It’s on my disk under Arcosanti.

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Sunday baguettes in a weekly market at Place de la Reunion in the 20th arrondissement of Paris Sunday baguettes in a weekly market at Place de la Reunion in the 20th arrondissement of Paris (© Owen Franken).

Curious about Owen Franken? View more of his work via the Franken Photo of the Week category, learn more in this profile, read a What Matters opinion column he wrote called “Life in Brownian Motion,” or visit his Web site.

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Back in the spring we announced the MIT Alumni Travel Program’s MIT Around the World Photo Contest. The idea was to photograph people, places, or things reminiscent of MIT culture or impacted by MIT. Finalists were then voted on by the MIT community, and winners received cool loot, a feature on the Alumni Association homepage, and a place of honor in the Travel Program’s 2011 Explorer catalog.

The winners have been announced and one thing became clear in the voting—MIT peeps prefer their images without gravity—the force, not the demeanor.

Dan Tani ’84, SM ’88 took home top prize with “Brass rat around the world in 90 minutes,” snapped aboard the International Space Station, which seems both a bit of an unfair advantage and ragingly awesome.

Brass rat around the world in 90 minutes, by Dan Tani '84, SM '88

"Brass rat around the world in 90 minutes," by Dan Tani '84, SM '88.

Second place went to Nathaniel Sharpe ’09 for “Defying gravity outside the lab,” taken in the mountains of Norway. I’m not sure if they used their camera’s timer but extra points if they did.

Defying gravity outside the lab, by Nathaniel Sharpe '09

"Defying gravity outside the lab," by Nathaniel Sharpe '09.

See all the honorable mentions in our media gallery.

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Sometimes doing good can get you an amazing dinner invitation.

Gul with Hillary Clinton at a State Department dinner. Photo: Huma Abedin

Gul with Hillary Clinton at a State Department dinner. Photo: Huma Abedin.

Saba Gul ’05, SM ’09 was recently invited by Hillary Clinton to a U.S. State Department Dinner. She was seated next to Sameh Shoukry, the Egyptian Ambassador, at a 200-person Iftar, a dinner to break the Ramadan fast, on September 7. The State Department dinner is an annual tradition, but this year 70 young change-makers—including Gul—were invited.

In her remarks, Secretary of State Clinton called out Gul’s BLISS program in particular. Gul, a member of a winning 2009 Public Service Center’s IDEAS Competition team, co-founded BLISS (Business and Life Skills School), a social enterprise dedicated to empowering adolescent girls in Pakistan, with Eleni Orphanides ′10.

BLISS girls in Attock. Photo: Saba Gul.

BLISS girls in Attock. Photo: Saba Gul.

BLISS promotes education for high-risk girls and helps them become become self-sufficient via income-boosting skills. The current focus is on Afghan refugee girls in Attock, Pakistan, who used to work at carpet looms for up to 14 hours a day. They are now coming to school plus learning crafts and business skills in after-school classes. An August entry on the BLISS blog describes a visit to the girls in Attock—and shows the beautiful handbags made from their embroidery.

Read Gul’s blog post for a taste of the event’s excitement, photos, and a link to the discussion that preceded the dinner, Generation Change: The Next Generation of American Muslim Leaders. Gul is a software architect working at Thomson Reuters in Minneapolis.

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Gioia De Cari SM '88 in Truth Values. Credit: Central Square Theater

“Recovering Mathematician” Brings Autobiographical Play Back to Cambridge

For more than a decade, self-proclaimed “recovering mathematician” Gioia De Cari SM ’88 has been making a living in theater–she acts, writes plays, truly loves the medium, and audiences seem to love her. But there’s one issue in particular, she says, that audiences can’t seem to get enough of: her background in math.

Background is even too light a word, because De Cari was completely entrenched. She was a top honors student as an undergrad at Berkeley and ran the math club when she was there. Then she came to MIT in the late 1980s, and things changed.

Truth Values, subtitled “One Girl’s Romp Through MIT’s Male Math Maze,” chronicles that change. In an interview with Under the Microscope, a writing project produced by The Feminist Press, De Cari said:

“I felt so alien. It seemed that the women that I observed – the other graduate students – coped by disappearing. They would wear, like, big plaid shirts and jeans, and sort of hide among and look just like the men. And I just couldn’t do that. There were so many things that happened, including being asked to serve cookies at a seminar, that made me so upset that I started dressing in outrageous clothing as a way of protesting it, sort of unconsciously. I guess something snapped, is what I say in my play. I just started wearing the most outrageous things when I served these cookies. And [the clothes] were very feminine … and that really made me into an alien if I wasn’t already one.”

She says the play is the only way she has been able to come to terms with her time at MIT and her feelings about math (she says she never wants to open another math book for as long as she lives, and it seems more than a little surprising that she comes so close to campus). At a discussion held by the MIT Libraries on Monday, De Cari acknowledged the irony of her situation.

“I found it cold when I was here, cold weather, cold people. That’s what my play is all about. But it feels different now,” said De Cari. “The whole math department came to one of my shows, and the chair even brought me a gift. I think things have changed.”

Truth Values runs through September 26 at the Central Square Theater. It is the second season De Cari has performed the show in Cambridge.


Other arts events to catch *before* the end of September:

Lori Nix Photographic Exhibit
This event occurs on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday through September 30, 2010.
Large scale vivid color photographs by Lori Nix of small dioramas, showing detailed worlds blown up into big worlds.

Cutting Class: Collages by Leah Brunetto ’12
This event occurs daily through September 30, 2010.
(Closing reception: Sept 30, 5pm.)

The works in this exhibition use real academic materials as a medium. This concept was developed by the artist in the process of clearing out her room after her second set of final exams. After coming across her old problem sets, she was reluctant to throw them away in the whirlwind of moving out for the summer, thinking of the energy that went into finishing them over the course of her first year at MIT. This collection of papers, combined with outside problem sets donated to the project, became a starting point for investigating new places and ideas.
Gallery is open 24 hours/day.

Making Architecture
This event occurs daily through October 06, 2010.
In concert with the opening of SA+P’s new Media Lab Complex, designed by Fumihiko Maki, an exhibit on the process of conceiving, designing and realizing the building is on display in the building’s lobby gallery at the corner of Ames and Amherst streets on the Cambridge campus. Featuring sketches, drawings, renderings, photos, construction documents and a model, along with smaller displays detailing six other current works by Maki, Making Architecture is on exhibit through October 6.

Sustainable Neighborhoods Through Inclusiveness, Community & Environment Case Study: Shenzhen, China

This event occurs on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday through October 01, 2010.
Since 2005, Vanke Corporation has sponsored research seminars, studios, and workshops at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on the topic of sustainable residential development. This exhibit synthesizes the four years of ideas, discussion, drawings, and writings produced by the students involved. The issues explored were: resource efficiency, the natural environment, community facilities and mobility.

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Oh sure, you could play another round of Tetris or wade into the sea that is YouTube when you’re doing your best not to be productive. But here’s a better idea—especially useful if, in addition to not wanting to work, you’d rather be somewhere else: Go look at somewhere else!

Joseph McMichael, a grad student in electrical engineering and computer science, has hacked Google Street View and developed Globe Genie, a random way to see the world. Simply choose from among five continents (sorry, Antarctica and South America) and Globe Genie, according to McMichael as quoted in the Guardian, “generates random latitude and longitude coordinates within several pre-specified rectangles around regions that have Street View imagery. It then queries Google’s servers to determine whether the point is valid. If not, it repeats this process until it finds a valid location.”

The most amazing thing might just be that when seen in small snippets, locales around the world, no matter how exotic, can also be quite familiar. A lonely street in Trajere, New South Wales, Australia could be a dead ringer for one in rural Michigan (trust me). Be sure to take a 360-degree twirl via the tool in the top left corner of the page.

Globe Genie by Joe McMichael

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