Venkatesh Murthy

Portrait photo of Venkatesh Murthy in his laboratory
Venkatesh MurthyPhotograph by Anna Olivella

Sight and hearing seem most important in guiding human behavior—but for many animals, including the mice Venkatesh Murthy studies in his lab, the sense of smell often dominates. A dozen years ago, this prompted a question that he still seeks to answer: “What is the smell world? It’s not very intuitive how this works in the brain. It seems like just a bunch of chemicals, yet animals group those chemicals into objects”: food, predators, potential mates. Human brains do the same, he adds. Evidence suggests a link between mood disorders and sense of smell, and loss of smell can be an early symptom of Alzheimer’s (and also, apparently, of COVID-19, a discovery that intrigues him). For the Erikson life sciences professor of molecular and cellular biology, these mysteries have always been an attraction. The son of an engineer, whose industrial hometown in southern India was planned by engineers (“so very clean and organized”), he, too, studied engineering in college before realizing halfway through that his interests lay elsewhere. Arriving at the University of Washington, Seattle, for graduate school, he was at first drawn to artificial intelligence, but found studying the brain itself more compelling (an exploration that continues in other ways at home, where Murthy plays guitar—“I adore jazz”—and reads poetry). This July he became Finnegan Family Director of Harvard’s Center for Brain Science, which brought him, unexpectedly, back to AI: “One thing we would like to move forward in the next decade is really understanding the basis of intelligence,” he says. In experiments, he has seen mice pick out specific, often subtle, smells amid an “olfactory cocktail party” of distracting odors. “It’s quite easy for them, actually….So, the question is, is there something in the way their brains are doing this that can inspire artificial intelligence systems?”

Read more articles by: Lydialyle Gibson

You might also like

New Kennedy School Dean Announced

Stanford political scientist Jeremy Weinstein set to lead

A New Chapter for Harvard Arts

The Office for the Arts turns 50, and its longtime director steps down.

Education School Announces Interim Dean

Nonie Lesaux will serve as dean during the search for a new one.

Most popular

New Kennedy School Dean Announced

Stanford political scientist Jeremy Weinstein set to lead

The Homelessness Public Health Crisis

Homelessness has surged in the United States, with devastating effects on the public health system.

The World’s Costliest Health Care

Administrative costs, greed, overutilization—can these drivers of U.S. medical costs be curbed?

More to explore

How is Artificial Intelligence Being Taught at Harvard?

A new Harvard course on artificial intelligence teaches students how to use the tool responsibly.

The Evolution of Human Fathers

Exploring the evolutionary biology of human fathers as caretakers

Civil War American Writer and Abolitionist John Greenleaf Whittier

Homes of the poet and abolitionist, whose verses were said to have inspired Abraham Lincoln.