Susan Murphy

Portrait of a hockey-playing statistician—from Louisiana

Photograph of Susan Murphy

Susan Murphy

Photograph by Jim Harrison

For Susan Murphy, mathematics was always the place “where everything made sense.” The first woman tenured in Harvard’s statistics department, she fell in love with numbers as a grade-schooler in southern Louisiana, surrounded by chemical plants and antebellum homes. She followed her interest to Louisiana State (“Because, you know, everybody goes to LSU if you’re from Louisiana”) and took every math course offered. In graduate school, she dove into probability and read a paper on martingale theory—“an area that studies how data evolve over time”—that changed her life. “I realized I wanted to solve real problems but use beautiful math to do it,” she says. In 2013 she won a MacArthur Fellowship for work on methodologies for finding therapies to treat chronic or relapsing diseases: depression, schizophrenia, addiction, cancer. “Much of the way we’ve collected data evidence in medicine is via randomized trials that were developed long ago, for settings in which the patient either was cured or died,” Murphy says. “So, you really only got one chance to help.” Today, as diseases wax and wane, clinicians must make a sequence of decisions about care. So, too, must patients, and Murphy’s recent work aims at them: mobile applications that use artificial intelligence to support struggles with alcoholism, smoking, overeating, and other challenges. “The contingencies of the moment conspire against you,” she says. “But a wearable device—a phone, a tracker—can help manage those contingencies with suggestions, advice, support. They can help get you to the next moment.” To clear her mind of professional puzzles (and help with her own contingencies), Murphy plays ice hockey, seriously, five times a week—another unlikely outcome for a Louisiana girl who fell, hard, for mathematics.

Read more articles by Lydialyle Gibson
Related topics

You might also like

Five Questions with Andrew Knoll

A paleontologist on how to understand Earth’s biggest extinction event

Harvard Professor Michael Sandel Wins Philosophy’s Berggruen Prize

The creator of the popular ‘Justice’ course receives a $1 million award.

Harvard Economist Wolfram Schlenker Is Tackling Climate Change

How extreme heat affects our land—and our food supply 

Most popular

Harvard Institute of Politics Director Setti Warren Dies at 55

The former Newton mayor is remembered as “a visionary and tireless leader” by the University community. 

What Trump Means for John Roberts’s Legacy

Executive power is on the docket at the Supreme Court.

Harvard Fiscal Year 2024 Finances

Annual Harvard financial results, and a look at the Faculty of Arts and Sciences’ fisc and professoriate

Explore More From Current Issue

Aisha Muharrar with shoulder-length hair, wearing a green blazer and white shirt.

Parks and Rec Comedy Writer Aisha Muharrar Gets Serious about Grief

With Loved One, the Harvard grad and Lampoon veteran makes her debut as a novelist.

Two small cast iron pans with berry-topped desserts, dusted with powdered sugar, alongside lemon slices.

Shopping for New England-made gifts this Holiday Season

Ways to support regional artists, designers, and manufacturers 

Wadsworth House with green shutters and red brick chimneys, surrounded by trees and other buildings.

Wadsworth House Nears 300

The building is a microcosm of Harvard’s history—and the history of the United States.