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- Oct 159:00 AMBuild Up Healthy Writing Habits with Writing Together Online (Challenge 1)Writing Together Online offers the structured writing time to help you stay focused and productive during the busy fall months. Join our daily 90-minute writing sessions and become part of a community of scholars who connect online, set realistic goals, and write together in the spirit of accountability and camaraderie. We offer writing sessions every workday, Monday through Friday. The program is open to all MIT students, postdocs, faculty, staff, and affiliates who are working on papers, proposals, thesis/dissertation chapters, application materials, and other writing projects.Please register for any number of sessions:Monday, Wednesday, and Friday 9:00–10:30am (EST) Tuesday and Thursday, 8:00–9:30am and 9:30-11:00am (EST)For more information and to register, go to this link or check the WCC website. Please spread the word and join with colleagues and friends. MIT Students and postdocs who attend at least 5 sessions per challenge will be entered into a gift-card raffle.
- Oct 1510:00 AMInk, Stone, and Silver Light: A Century of Cultural Heritage Preservation in AleppoOn view October 1 -- December 11, 2025This exhibition draws on archival materials from the Aga Khan Documentation Center at MIT (AKDC) to explore a century of cultural heritage preservation in Aleppo, Syria. It takes as its point of departure the work of Kamil al-Ghazzi (1853–1933), the pioneering Aleppine historian whose influential three-volume chronicle, Nahr al-Dhahab fī Tārīkh Ḥalab (The River of Gold in the History of Aleppo), was published between 1924 and 1926.Ink, Stone, and Silver Light presents three modes of documentation—manuscript, built form, and photography—through which Aleppo’s urban memory has been recorded and preserved. Featuring figures such as Michel Écochard and Yasser Tabbaa alongside al-Ghazzi, the exhibition traces overlapping efforts to capture the spirit of a city shaped by commerce, craft, and coexistence. At a time when Syria again confronts upheaval and displacement, these archival fragments offer models for preserving the past while envisioning futures rooted in dignity, knowledge, and place.
- Oct 1511:30 AMBioinformatics SeminarSpeaker: Marina Sirota (University of California, San Francisco)Title: From Data to Knowledge: Integrating Clinical and Molecular Data for Predictive MedicineAbstract: Alzheimer’s disease (AD) remains one of the most pressing medical challenges, with limited therapeutic options and heterogeneous disease trajectories complicating diagnosis and treatment. Recent advances in computational biology and artificial intelligence (AI) together with availability of rich molecular and clinical data, offer new opportunities to address these challenges by integrating molecular, clinical, and systems-level insights. In our recent studies, we developed a cell-type-directed, network-correcting approach to identify and prioritize rational drug combinations for AD, enabling targeted modulation of disease-relevant pathways across distinct cellular contexts (Li et al., Cell 2025). Complementarily, by leveraging large-scale electronic medical records (EMRs) integrated with biological knowledge networks, we demonstrated the ability to predict disease onset and progression while uncovering mechanistic insights into AD heterogeneity (Tang et al., Nature Aging 2024). Together, these complementary approaches illustrate the power of combining real-world clinical data, knowledge networks, and systems pharmacology to advance precision medicine for AD. This work highlights a paradigm shift toward AI-enabled, data-driven strategies that bridge molecular discovery and clinical application, ultimately informing novel therapeutic interventions and improving patient care.Biography: Marina is currently a Professor and the Interim Director at the Bakar Computational Health Sciences Institute at UCSF. Prior to that she has worked as a Senior Research Scientist at Pfizer where she focused on developing Precision Medicine strategies in drug discovery. She completed her PhD in Biomedical Informatics at Stanford University. Dr. Sirota’s research experience in translational bioinformatics spans nearly 20 years during which she has co-authored ove r 170 scientific publications. Her research interests lie in developing computational integrative methods and applying these approaches in the context of disease diagnostics and therapeutics with a special focus on women’s health. The Sirota laboratory is funded by NIA, NLM, NIAMS, Pfizer, March of Dimes and the Burroughs Wellcome Fund. As a young leader in the field, she has been awarded the AMIA Young Investigator Award in 2017. She leads the UCSF March of Dimes Prematurity Research Center at UCSF as well as co-directs ENACT, a center to study precision medicine for endometriosis. Dr. Sirota also is the founding director of the AI4ALL program at UCSF, with the goal of introducing high school girls to applications of AI and machine learning in biomedicine.In person or on Zoom at https://mit.zoom.us/j/93513735220
- Oct 1512:00 PMThe Making of National InterestProfessor Soyoung Lee from Yale University at will speak at the MIT Security Studies Program's Wednesday Seminar.Summary: Why do states and their citizens often fight over barren, seemingly worthless territories while not fighting over territories or issues that can be potentially more valuable? In this seminar, Professor Lee will discuss her book, which proposes a new theory of national interest to answer the puzzle. It argues that issues without clear economic value—such as barren lands—are more likely to be perceived as national interests precisely because they do not benefit any single domestic group. Since who benefits is unclear, politicians have an easier time framing such issues as benefiting the entire nation. This book draws on geospatial analyses of territorial claims, survey experiments, textual analyses of political rhetoric, and archival case studies to provide support for the theory. By showing how economic benefits can frequently become a liability in mobilizing unified support for conflict, this book challenges our conventional understanding of economic value in international relations and contributes to a new understanding of distributive politics and foreign policy. It also systematically unpacks how issue value in international relations is formed and deepens our insight into a core question in international relations: what states fight for and why.
- Oct 1512:15 PMMidday Music: MIT RibotonesJoin us for a lunchtime concert with the MIT Ribotones featuring solo and small group chamber performances of classical music.
- Oct 151:00 PMGIS for Climate Justice: Using Climate Data to Examine Environmental Justice IssuesAre you looking to advance your GIS skills? This workshop offers a comprehensive review of GIS fundamentals and its practical applications. Participants will gain an in-depth understanding of how to utilize spatial analysis tools in ArcGIS Pro to analyze geographic data effectively. Through a step-by-step tutorial, you will learn how to model site suitability based on social vulnerability, temperature data, and cooling adaptation infrastructure, providing valuable insights for climate adaptation decision-making. Additionally, the workshop will guide you in refining and enhancing map designs using Adobe Illustrator, equipping you with the skills to produce professional-quality visualizations.Goals:Review GIS Essentials: Gain a solid understanding of GIS fundamentals and its practical applications. Suitability Analysis for Climate Adaptation: Engage in a step-by-step tutorial to model site suitability based on social vulnerability, temperature data, and cooling adaptation infrastructure. Enhance Maps with Adobe Illustrator: Learn how to refine and elevate map designs using Adobe Illustrator for professional-quality results.