Research Roster

Harvard hums with research. In the fiscal year ended June 30, 2000, the University received $429 million in sponsored-research support...

Harvard hums with research. In the fiscal year ended June 30, 2000, the University received $429 million in sponsored-research support, principally from the federal government. Even that sum is understated: it excludes hundreds of millions more expended at affiliated hospitals, in dozens of endowment-funded research centers, and in the daily activities of humanists whose scholarship often involves only pad, pencil, and library card.

web site home page
web page
But how does an outsider get a handle on the product of myriad laboratories spread across diverse schools, medical facilities, and interfaculty research programs? Seeking to serve the interests of several lay constituencies, the University's news and public affairs office has created one-stop shopping for the curious with a combined Internet and print channel collectively known as "Research Matters."

The tail is an annual publication, Research Matters, that colorfully highlights recent work in six user-friendly, intuitive categories: mind, body, society, earth, space, and technology. The dog is the accompanying website, www.researchmatters.harvard.edu, updated continuously with synopses of new research, links to the underlying information (including the faculty members doing the work), and thoughtful, easy-to-navigate indexes. Launched in June with several hundred stories, it will quickly grow to encompass thousands.

The aim is to make the researchers' dialogue accessible to government policymakers who control funding, politicians who appropriate the money, journalists, alumni, and students who are tapping current research for school papers. This effort to knit together Harvard sources of research information--and to translate the results into appealing English--may be as ambitious as the research itself.

Most popular

How MAGA Went Mainstream at Harvard

Trump, TikTok, and the pandemic are reshaping Gen Z politics.

Free Speech, the Bomb—and Donald Trump

A Harvard cardiologist on the unlikely alliances that shaped a global movement to prevent nuclear war

Explore More From Current Issue

Man in gray sweater standing in hallway with colorful abstract art on wall.

How Do Single-Celled Organisms Learn and Remember

A Harvard neuroscientist’s quest to model memory in single-celled organisms

David McCord in suit reading a book at cluttered wooden desk in office filled with framed art and shelves.

The Pump Celebrates Its 85th Birthday

Giving Harvard traditions their due 

Karla Cornejo Villavicencio smiling beside the pink cover of her novel "Catalina" featuring a jeweled star and eye.

Being Undocumented in America

Karla Cornejo Villavicencio’s writing aims to challenge assumptions.