More from Events Calendar
- Nov 204:00 PMContagious AmbiguityRyota Iijima Princeton University (joint with Mira Frick and Daisuke Oyama)
- Nov 204:00 PMTBAAlexandre Belloni (Duke University)
- Nov 204:15 PMFall 2025 ORC Seminar SeriesA series of talks on OR-related topics. For more information see: https://orc.mit.edu/seminars-events/
- Nov 204:30 PMApplied Math ColloquiumSpeaker: Mike O'Neil (Courant Institute)
- Nov 204:30 PMStarr Forum: Rethinking Globalization: America First, The World Last?The Trump administration has reversed decades of U.S. support for globalization by pulling out of multilateral trade deals, imposing tariffs, restricting immigration, and sidelining global institutions. Join us for a conversation with MIT experts on the impact and potential outcomes of such policies for our nation and the world.Please RSVP here.SPEAKERS:Suzanne Berger is an Institute Professor at MIT. She serves on faculty at the Department of Political Science and is affiliated with the Center for International Studies. Her research focus is on politics and globalization. Additionally, she co-directs the newly launched Initiative for New Manufacturing (INM) which brings engineers, social scientists, and economists together to work on how to transform manufacturing. She also led the MIT Production in the Innovation Economy project (Making in America: From Innovation to Market, 2013). She founded the MIT International Science and Technology Initiative (MISTI) program, which sends hundreds of MIT students abroad each year for internships in labs and companies.Simon Johnson is the Ronald A. Kurtz (1954) Professor of Entrepreneurship at the MIT Sloan School of Management, where he is head of the Global Economics and Management group. At MIT, he is also co-director of the Stone Center Initiative and a research affiliate at Blueprint Labs. In 2024, he received the Sveriges Rsbank Prize in Economic Sciences in memory of Alfred Nobel, joint with Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson, “for studies of how institutions are formed and affect prosperity.”MODERATOR:Richard Locke is the John C Head III Dean at the MIT Sloan School of Management. A scholar of international labor standards and comparative political economy, Locke began his appointment as dean in July 2025. Prior to this, Locke served as the dean of Apple University, which focuses on internal leadership and management education for Apple, Inc. and was Brown University’s provost, a position he held for nearly eight years. Earlier at MIT, he served as the Class of 1922 Professor of Political Science and Management and the Alvin J. Siteman Professor of Entrepreneurship, as well as the head of the political science department and MIT Sloan’s deputy dean.Free & open to the public. A recording will be posted on YouTube following the event.MIT is committed to providing an environment that is accessible to individuals with disabilities. If you need a disability related accommodation to attend or have other questions, please contact us at starrforum@mit.edu.Sign up for Starr Forum emails to get notified about upcoming events.A full listing of Starr Forums is available here.
- Nov 205:00 PMMusic Forum: Andrew Schartmann, music theoristBefore Games Could Listen: Thinking Beyond Interactivity in Early Game MusicEarly game sound is often framed as a technological stepping stone, or, more negatively, as a crude precursor to the interactive and adaptive scores of later decades. This narrative of progress, while historically coherent, has tended to obscure the musical imagination and structural sophistication that flourished within early gaming platforms. My work reconsiders that narrative by showing how alternative modes of listening—attentive to structure, design, and technological limitation—can reveal distinct compositional logics and aesthetic priorities, inviting a broader understanding of creativity before games could “listen.”About the SpeakerAndrew Schartmann is a composer and music theorist whose work bridges classical traditions and interactive media. He is a Professor of Music Theory at the New England Conservatory and serves as Audio Director of Yale’s XR Pediatrics Lab, where he creates sound and music for award-winning augmented-reality games, including SmokeSCREEN VR (Gold Medal Winner, 2020 International Serious Play Awards; Forbes Top 50 VR Games of 2019) and Year of the Cicadas (Unity for Humanity Winner, 2023).Schartmann is the creator of NADIA, a mobile app that teaches music fundamentals through gamified learning, scheduled for release in November 2025. He is currently collaborating with William E. Caplin on an interactive website devoted to Beethoven’s piano sonatas and recently curated Beethoven: A Multisensory Experience, an exhibit that explores Beethoven’s legacy through play and interactive storytelling.His books include Koji Kondo’s Super Mario Bros. Soundtrack (Bloomsbury, 2015), Keiji Inafune(Bloomsbury, 2025), Analyzing NES Music (Intellect / University of Chicago Press, 2025), and a forthcoming volume on The Legend of Zelda for the University of Chicago Press. Schartmann is Associate Editor of DSCH Journal and serves on the editorial boards of The Journal of Sound and Music in Games and SMT-V.About the Music Forum SeriesThe MIT Music & Theater Arts Music Forum is a series of public presentations by music scholars from inside and outside of MIT. Hosted in the Lewis Music Library and presented in partnership with MIT Libraries, the MTA Music Forum Series gives the MIT Community an opportunity to engage with leading voices in every field of music scholarship. Past presenters include John Harbison, Julia Wolfe, Terry Riley, Don Byron, and others.