Current BLISS Projects

charles river with tulips

Summer 2024 Project Options

BLISS Independent Research Option

In addition to the menu of BLISS projects on offer, students may propose their own campus-based social science research projects under supervision of a faculty mentor. (At this time a maximum of three “independent research” students will be accepted to the program.) NOTE: These slots may be extremely competitive, and priority will be given to advanced students demonstrating strong research skills. Students earlier in their academic careers should consider applying to faculty-led projects.

This option may be most suitable for an existing student-faculty research collaboration that would benefit from the student’s ability to commit to fulltime work over an extended period.

To propose a BLISS independent research project, student applicants must a) identify a mentor, and b) describe the proposed research in detail, including:

  • the goals/expected outcomes for the 9-week summer research period, and an explanation of how this relates to your general short-term (undergraduate) and long-term academic and professional goals
  • a general plan for your daily/weekly research-related activities (“fulltime” research is loosely defined as 35-40 hours per week.)
  • information about the resources and materials to be engaged on campus
  • a plan for communicating with the research mentor (How often will you meet? What will you do if you encounter problems or have questions between meetings?)

In the BLISS application, your independent project proposal will be included as your first and second essay responses. If you have already conducted research with your mentor, make sure to explain how this summer opportunity is significantly different from term-time research and particularly beneficial to your academic and career development. Please answer the third essay question as it is framed.

Research Mentor Confirmation Letter

Your letter of recommendation must be from your research mentor and should comment on your qualifications for the project as well as the mentor’s role over the summer. Please provide the following instructions to your mentor (which differ from the general instructions to recommenders). Please also see the FAQs on the BLISS homepage.

Instructions for mentors

Please provide a letter of recommendation for the applicant, addressing the following information:

  1. In what capacity do you know the applicant? If the student is already conducting research with you, how will BLISS differ significantly from the applicant’s term-time work?
  2. Is the applicant qualified to carry out the research as described? Are the goals feasible within the specified time period? Does the workplan seem reasonable?
  3. What is your mentoring plan? What will the student learn from you? How will you oversee their work? If you are traveling at any point during the summer, how will you stay in contact with the student?
  4. A critical component of the BLISS program is the student’s participation in the “summer undergraduate research village” community. How do you envision the applicant benefitting from, and contributing to, the community?
Firearm Violence and Mythologies of Armed Self-Defense | Caroline Light (SWGS)

Caroline LightHistorian and Director of Undergraduate Studies in the Program in Studies of Women, Gender, and Sexuality

More than 48,000 people died from gunshot wounds in 2022, and 2023 witnessed the highest number of mass shootings to date. Despite our nation’s unmatched rates firearm-related death and injury, research-based firearm regulations have been under attack since the Supreme Court’s 2022 decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association Inc. v. Bruen. Simultaneously, policies that increase civilians’ access to firearms have expanded based on the assumption that firearms are necessary for individual self-defense. Over half the states allow permitless or “Constitutional” carry, in which civilians may carry guns into public space without a license, background check, or any training. And since 2005, approximately two-thirds of the states have adopted some version of a “Stand Your Ground” law, providing legal immunity to some who use lethal violence in self-defense, without first trying to retreat.

In partnership with the GVPedia, a clearinghouse for cutting-edge research and data on firearm violence, this project investigates self-defensive gun use with particular focus on the race and gender implications of armed self-defense. The research for this project will be conducted using multiple different methods and through a number of different archives and data sets. We will begin by surveying existing data on gender, race, and firearm homicide, and we will address the reasons why some vital data sets are missing or difficult to access. We may start by reading some shared texts (and exploring existing data sets) on the intersections of gender, race, sexuality, and violence more generally.

An average day may have the researcher reading through and coding court cases involving self-defensive homicide, or constructing surveys to code large data sets for insight into (for example) the circumstances under which women have used lethal violence in self-defense, and what percentage of those cases involve someone known to the suspect. The researcher might scan state legal codes to update our existing database of state level “Stand Your Ground” laws. Researchers may also investigate homicide proceedings to determine how the criminal justice system adjudicates different people’s claims of self-defensive violence.

We will start the summer with frequent meetings where we check in and plan each day’s work. Depending on the student researcher’s level of familiarity, we might start with some shared readings to set the conceptual stage (e.g. articles on “intersectional” violence, an introduction to the various databases and archives we’ll be working with, some basic overviews of the kinds of questions we want to ask).

Skills Needed: The ideal researcher will be self-motivated, intellectually curious, and capable of working independently. Ideally, it would help to possess some familiarity with the basics of gender and ethnic studies, perhaps having taken one or two relevant courses in feminist/queer and Ethnic/EMR or African American Studies. Some experience in statistics, social scientific methods, and comfort analyzing quantitative data is preferred. Above all, the ideal researcher will possess an open mind and an abundance of curiosity, plus a capacity to look beyond the surface of our culture’s prevailing assumptions about safety and justice.

Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments Internship (co-listed with SHARP) | Hannah Marcus (HSCI)

Hannah Marcus, John and Ruth Hazel Associate Professor of the Social Sciences and Interim Faculty Director of the Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments

The Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments is eager to recruit 2 undergraduates to join our team for summer 2024. CHSI BLISS/SHARP fellows will learn about how university museums function and will participate in the following activities:

  • Learning how to handle historical scientific instruments
  • Working with staff to curate a mini exhibition that will be on display in the front foyer of the History of Science Department
  • Familiarizing themselves with the permanent exhibition in the Putnam Gallery in order to be able to give student-led tours
  • Participating in supervised cleaning, preservation, and documentation of objects in the collection

CHSI has a deep team of professionals covering different area of museum work including: curation, collections management, operations, and preservation. BLISS/SHARP fellows will be mentored by different team members for the various aspects of their work, but they should plan on being present for weekly all-staff meetings, and M-Th daily check-ins with their assigned daily lead. The incoming Executive Director will be their primary contact though they will also work closely with the faculty director, collections manager, curators, and project manager. On Fridays, fellows will be encouraged to read about and conduct research on the subject selected for their exhibition, and to continue to familiarize themselves with objects in the galleries in order to lead tours.

Skills Needed

  • Willingness to come to work in person at least 4 days per week
  • Enthusiasm about hands-on work with historical collections
  • Interest in history and the history of science
Integrating Machine Learning into New Estimators for Policy Evaluation | Rahul Singh (ECON)

Rahul Singh, Assistant Professor of Economics (AY25); Junior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows; Faculty Affiliate of the Harvard Data Science Institute

Depending on interest and timing, we will select a project for the summer. Some options include: (i) how to extrapolate from short term effects to long term effects, when the policy interventions are continuous variables; (ii) how to estimate policy effects with confidence intervals, using text as data. The student will have the opportunity to conduct simulations and a real-world policy evaluation, in Python or R, using novel estimators that integrate machine learning into econometrics. Off-the-shelf statistical packages do not exist; the work will be to adapt code from different problems to our problem of interest. The student should have a strong background in programming, some experience in data science, and a curiosity for causal inference. We will meet one-on-one weekly, either in-person or on Zoom according to the student’s preference.

Skills Needed: Stat 104 or equivalent, Python fluency, R fluency

Landscapes of Power in Late and Post-Roman Africa | Michael McCormick (HIST)

Michael McCormick, Francis Goelet Professor of Medieval History

Much like today, the Roman province of Africa (modern Libya, Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco) was a religious, cultural, and linguistic crossroads and melting pot. The Roman Empire and its successors in the region (the Vandal Kingdom, Byzantium, and the Islamic Caliphate) sought to shape and control interactions between the diverse populations that resided in or traversed North Africa. Their efforts left an enduring architectural imprint on the landscape, which has been gradually documented by archaeologists and historians: road networks, fortification systems, and religious edifices. In this Science of the Human Past project, students will work with the SoHP team to develop existing geodatabases mapping the material culture of Late and Post-Roman Africa, creating geodatabases and mapping sites to understand how building and infrastructure campaigns reshaped the territory. This will be done in the framework of Mapping Past Societies (MAPS), a Harvard-created digital resource which allows innovative spatial and temporal analyses of world civilizations from 1500 BCE to the present. As part of this unique summer project, you will be involved in mapping roads, forts, and churches, documented archaeologically and historically. As such, you will learn much about the political culture of Roman North Africa and the diverse peoples that settled in its territories, including Christians and Jews, Berbers and Vandals, Greeks, Arabs, and Sub-Saharan Africans. You will have the opportunity to learn how the Science of the Human Past team uses and constructs its geodatabases, in combination with the most advanced scientific analyses of ancient genetics and environmental evidence, to make revolutionary new discoveries about ancient Mediterranean political, demographic, and economic patterns and structures. Additionally, as part of our work on recent discoveries in the North African landscape, you will also have the opportunity to learn to use basic archaeological and historical databases of secondary sources, collecting information into a database to understand the spatial patterns and policies behind the sites.

By crossing disciplines and embracing innovation, this project pushes the boundaries of convention as it relates data from the social sciences and humanities to allow undergraduate researchers to reveal undiscovered facets of the human past and, especially, the way different empires controlled territory through economic, military, and religious building campaigns. Students who contribute substantially to each database will be cited as co-authors of digital dataset releases as well as, potentially, research publications. The project will improve the contributor’s skills in data science, Geographic Information Systems (GIS, the technology behind all digital maps), and management of “big data,” to reveal revolutionary insights into the distribution of sites and the political strategies that shaped the ancient world and which define ours. The selected student will use the digital and scientific advances of archaeology, history and archaeo-science to enrich and expand the liberal arts, and vice versa.

Types of tasks include: reading historical sources and literature and translating them into data that computers and mapping software can understand; locating unknown sites on maps and atlases; deep reading of texts to understand overall context and meaning of historical circumstances in which documents were produced; producing digital maps of roads, fortresses, and churches; reading scholarly research in history, archaeology, and several other disciplines and translating that information into maps or databases for additional research applications.

The selected student will meet weekly with faculty leads and keep in touch with leadership team via Slack or email. Assignments will be made via Zoom tutorial. Ideally, you will learn the basics of GIS software and how to build digital maps. You will also learn how to create databases, how to coordinate work in a sizeable team, how to quality-check and deliver a finished, reliable research dataset. If warranted, you will be asked to develop basic analysis queries through GIS or other software that can reveal hidden patterns in big data. Selected student may receive ongoing guidance when needed through email or Slack, in addition to in-person meetings with leadership.

Skills Needed: The successful candidate will have familiarity with Microsoft Excel, PDFs, and will be able to learn quickly how to use Google Translate. Familiarity with foreign languages (French, German, Latin, Greek, or Arabic) is a plus but not required. Familiarity with GIS and/or statistical software desirable but not at all required. Prior coursework in history or archaeology a plus, but not a pre-requisite. Discipline, enthusiasm and enjoyment of a team environment working closely with senior researchers is essential.

Inferences About Gender and Gender Differences | Nicole Noll (PSYC/SWGS)

Nicole NollSenior Preceptor in Psychology

“Gender” is a construct with many aspects and meanings. It is used to refer to one of an individual’s identities, to describe traits and behaviors that are considered more typical or appropriate for women vs. men (or vice versa), and (incorrectly) as a synonym for “sex.” How do these various aspects and meanings of gender play out in people’s day-to-day lives?

We pose and explore research questions broadly related to gender, such as:

  • Some people’s appearance does not conform to gender norms. Does that affect their lived experiences and what other people think about them? If so, how?
  • Are body postures and styles of movement related to individuals’ perceptions of their own gender and that of other people?
  • What does the process of gender identity development look like for individuals who identify as nonbinary?
  • Does the type of explanation given for a gender difference in an illness influence a reader’s future decision-making and/or behavior related to that illness?
  • Do the inferences people make about scientific findings about sex/gender differences vary based on how the data are represented visually?

BLISS fellows will have the opportunity to work on one of several current projects and will get experience with multiple stages of the research process, such as articulating a research question, conducting a literature review, preparing experimental materials, collecting and analyzing data, writing research reports, and presenting results orally. The student researchers will make a substantive contribution to the project through their work.

The activities of BLISS fellows will vary based on the project(s) they are working on, their previous knowledge and experience, and their progress over the summer. Most student researchers may expect to spend a few hours each day reading scientific literature related to their project and a few hours working with an existing dataset. The remaining lab hours will be devoted to tasks such as meetings, conducting literature reviews, developing experimental materials and protocols, or entering/coding/analyzing data.

At the beginning of the summer we will meet to establish a foundational understanding of the project(s), set goals for the summer, and lay out a work plan for each day. We will begin by reading and discussing articles that provide the basis for the research question addressed by the project and learning relevant lab procedures (e.g., experimental protocols, data management, etc.). We rely on student researchers to be actively engaged, ask questions, and think critically about all aspects of the research process. We hope to foster BLISS fellows’ ability to generate their own hypotheses and design experiments to test them. After we have laid a foundation, we will meet weekly (or as needed). This summer experience will help students decide whether they want to pursue a career path that involves social science research.

Skills Needed: Curiosity about human behavior, some background in psychology and, ideally, gender studies. Previous experience in a psychology lab is preferred, but not required, as project-specific skills will be lea

Evaluating & Improving the Effectiveness of Youth Mental Health Care | John Weisz (PSYC)

John Weisz (Professor of Psychology, Director of Lab for Youth Mental Health), Katherine Venturo-Conerly (Graduate Student in Lab for Youth Mental Health, Dept. of Psychology), and Josh Steinberg (Graduate Student in Lab for Youth Mental Health, Dept. of Psychology)

In recent decades, there have been major advances in the assessment, prevention, and treatment of mental health challenges in children and adolescents (herein “youths”). However, these efforts have not markedly reduced rates of psychopathology among youths on a large scale. Indeed, approximately 1 in 4 youths will experience at least one psychiatric disorder—such as depressive, anxiety, and conduct-related disorders—before adulthood, and these rates have not considerably changed over the years. With this in mind, our lab aims to explore methods for improving the effectiveness of youth psychotherapies.

A BLISS student in the Lab for Youth Mental Health will be involved in two distinct, but related, lines of research. A BLISS student will spend most of their time (~75%) under the day-to-day supervision of Josh Steinberg, assisting with the management of a database of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of youth mental health interventions, to be used in meta-analyses that test which treatments work best for which mental health problems. This database of youth psychotherapy RCTs targeting anxiety problems, depressive problems, conduct/misbehavior problems, and ADHD problems began in January 1960 and has been continuously updated since (currently up through 2020) through comprehensive and systematic searches in PubMed and PsycINFO. Through screening articles for inclusion in this database and preparing studies to be coded for analyses, a BLISS student will gain substantial knowledge of the youth mental health treatment literature and gain skills important to systematic reviews and meta-analyses. Opportunities to assist with ongoing meta-analyses and/or lead one’s own systematic review and meta-analysis are also possible.

The second research project (comprising ~25% of BLISS student’s time) will be supervised by Katherine Venturo-Conerly. This second project will involve continuing work to compile data from 6 randomized controlled trials of a popular transdiagnostic youth psychotherapy (Modular Approach to Treatment for Children with Anxiety, Depression, Trauma, or Conduct Problems; MATCH-ADTC), then analyzing this data to assess the effectiveness of specific treatment elements within this youth psychotherapy. Additionally, this work will involve testing how demographic and clinical characteristics of youths and families interact with the effects of each treatment element. This project is already underway, and exact tasks will depend on what steps are completed by this summer, but work will very likely involve: 1) data cleaning and management, 2) literature review, and 3) assistance with interpreting and writing up statistical analyses. For this project, some experience with R and Excel is preferred, as is willingness to be meticulous in data management activities. For interested and motivated fellows hoping to make a longer-term commitment to this project, Katherine will gladly support secondary analyses or related literature reviews, and support fellow-led poster presentation and manuscript submissions as appropriate.

We are excited by the possibility that a BLISS student might participate in these projects. The BLISS student will be encouraged to identify pieces of these projects that are most interesting to them to pursue for their final project, and opportunities to be involved with manuscript development will be offered, as appropriate.

Skills Needed: This BLISS experience will be especially relevant to students who plan to pursue graduate study in clinical psychology. Students are most likely to thrive in our lab when they prioritize kindness and collaboration, attention to detail, meticulousness, reliability, and a genuine willingness to learn. Previous coursework in clinical psychology and/or research methods may be helpful but is not required. Previous experience with data management and statistical computing software such as R Studio are preferred but not required.

What Are Infants & Children Thinking and How Are They Learning? | Elizabeth Spelke (PSYC)

Elizabeth SpelkeMarshall L. Berkman Professor of Psychology
Cristina Sarmiento, Lab Manager

The Spelke Lab conducts research in developmental cognitive science with infants and children and investigates the development of perception and knowledge of objects and their motions, agents and their actions, people and their social engagements, number, geometry, and formal mathematics.

Throughout the summer, student research assistants have the opportunity to learn about a wide variety of research topics within the cognitive sciences and attend professional development workshops. Student research assistants will be responsible for:

  • recruiting and scheduling infant and child participants and their families
  • assisting lab researchers in testing infants and children on Zoom and on campus
  • interacting with families who participate in study sessions
  • coding infant looking time responses and toddler behavioral responses
  • working with grad students/postdocs to complete tasks specific to their research
  • analyzing data

Students may also have the opportunity to assist in designing new studies.

Each student RA is paired with a grad student or postdoc in the lab to focus on one topic in depth. Students will always be supervised by the lab manager and/or mentor. Students will have weekly check-in meetings with the lab manager and will meet with their mentor weekly, or more frequently on an as-needed basis.

Skills Needed: An interest in and ability to work with young children is required, and previous experience is a plus.

[added 2/7] American Mass Incarceration in Comparative and Historical Perspective | Adaner Usmani (SOCI)

Adaner UsmaniAssistant Professor of Sociology and Social Studies

American mass incarceration is one of the major social problems of our times. The United States incarcerates more people than perhaps any other country in world history except for Stalin’s Soviet Union. Those it incarcerates are disproportionately likely to be poor and nonwhite. Scholars have offered various compelling explanations for American mass incarceration, but one of the weaknesses of most work on punishment is that it seeks to understand America by studying just America. This project seeks to bring comparative and historical perspective to the study of the American carceral state.

We aim to gather several kinds of historical data on punishment, policing and violence in other countries (with a focus on other advanced capitalist countries and Latin America). The RA will be responsible for collecting these data, which will involve reading and transcribing archival documents, trawling for new sources online, maintaining an existing database, emailing scholars in the field, and more. This continues research done by other RA’s over the past two years, so there is a lot to do and a lot to build on.

You’ll be joining a team of RA’s from Harvard and the University of Chicago, as well as some independent scholars. I will ask that you write weekly summaries of what you have done. You will meet once weekly with me and the whole research team, and you and I will also meet occasionally to make sure all is going well. You will end the summer with experience building a big dataset from a patchwork of sometimes inconsistent archival sources. We will also talk regularly about how to use these data to test arguments about punishment and policing.

Skills Needed: Spreadsheet and basic quantitative skills to curate and maintain the dataset. More advanced skills (programming, webscraping, regression analysis, etc.) would be a real plus.

[added 2/7] American Communities Computable Newspaper Database | Melissa Dell (ECON)

Melissa DellAndrew E. Furer Professor of Economics

Interactions with the larger project team will be via Zoom (not everyone is in Cambridge), but there will be opportunities for in-person interactions with pre-docs/PI in Cambridge.

We have developed a deep learning pipeline to extract structured text from over 50 million page scans drawn from over 10,000 historical U.S. newspapers (1880-1978). We are now using cutting edge NLP methods to understand what content different newspapers printed, the sources they used (i.e. locally generated versus newswire or syndicated content), the sentiment of their coverage, and what factors influenced the choice of content and its sentiment. Specific topics examined currently include the drivers of anti-war sentiment during the Vietnam War and how a deadly vaccine accident in the 1950s influenced sentiment towards vaccination and public health more generally.

Working with the PI/pre-doctoral fellow to build out a full deep learning pipeline to analyze newspaper sentiment across time on a topic of mutual interest. This entails compiling data necessary to train an NLP model, validating results, and doing visualizations and statistical analyses of the output. The PI and fellow will work together to identify a public policy topic that received substantial media coverage across space and time, that is feasible to quantify, and that is of mutual interest.

The student will join weekly group meetings with the entire team, including the PI, and will give a brief presentation at these meetings on a weekly basis. The student will also receive daily feedback from the PI and/or a predoctoral fellow on a short written report of daily progress. The predoctoral fellow mentor will help the student troubleshoot and acquire the needed skills to implement a topic/sentiment analysis pipeline.

Skills Needed: Knowledge of Python and R. Strong interest in using quantitative methods, including those drawn from deep learning, to shed new light on fundamental social science questions.

[added 2/7] Exploring Language Acquisition using EEG | Jesse Snedeker (PSYC)

Jesse SnedekerProfessor of Psychology

Language is not one representation but many. A spoken utterance can be characterized as a string of phonemes, a nested set of prosodic phrases, a series of lexical items, a hierarchically organized syntactic tree, a configuration of semantic relations, or the impetus for inferences about the speaker’s intentions. A fundamental challenge for the psychology of language is to understand the relations between these representations: the degree to which they are distinct, the ways in which they constrain one another, and the role that these connections play in language acquisition. My lab explores these questions with a primary focus on meaning.

Our approach to these questions is experimental and developmental. We use methods such as: EEG (measuring the electricity generated by the brain); eyetracking (monitoring children’s gaze patterns to infer what they are thinking); and behavioral experiments with a wide range of populations and languages.

BLISS fellows will be given the opportunity to work on one of several EEG projects investigating how children acquire and process language. Fellows will be assigned a project based on their interests and will be involved in all major steps of its lifecycle: preparing study stimuli, conducting literature searches, recruiting participants, coding, entering, and transcribing data, and presenting their results. This will allow fellows to work closely with their mentors to make a contribution to the design of the study and the interpretation of its results.

The typical day in the life of a BLISS fellow in our lab varies depending on the specific project to which they are assigned and their progress over the summer. However, most fellows can anticipate spending 2-3 hours each day running participants, 2-3 hours recruiting participants, and the remaining time in the lab on tasks such as reading literature relevant to their project, attending research meetings with their mentor, or coding and entering data.

The BLISS Fellow(s) will be paired with a graduate researcher and will be involved in all major steps of psycholinguistic research. They also participate in a weekly Reading Group to talk about 1-2 journal articles with other interns, while 1-2 research mentors moderate the discussion, in weekly Lab Meetings, and in weekly meetings with their graduate student mentor and Dr. Snedeker.

In short, BLISS Fellow(s) get a chance to experience firsthand how scientific knowledge is actually produced, potentially helping them to decide whether to pursue graduate studies and a career in science, or not.

Skills Needed: An active interest in working with children, some background in linguistics and psychology, a high degree of independence, problem-solving skills and the ability and interest to quickly acquire new skills.

[added 2/7] Democratic Knowledge Project (DKP) at the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics

Katie GilesStrategic Initiatives Project Officer, Democratic Knowledge Project (Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics)

The EJSCE is currently seeking BLISS Fellows to support a major initiative, the Democratic Knowledge Project (DKP), seeking to renew K-12 civic education. The DKP offers curriculum development resources, professional development workshops for educators, and assessment tools and resources—all in support of education for constitutional democracy. Among the questions we are trying to answer this summer are:

  • How do curricular resources support learners’ development of civic identity?
  • How can professional development support educators’ development of their own civic learning?
  • What are administrator, teacher, caregiver, and youth perceptions, questions, hopes and concerns regarding in-school civic learning?

The types of tasks that a student research assistant would be undertaking include: preparing and cataloging qualitative data (such as completed interviews, focus groups) and quantitative data (such as surveys or demographic data); conducting literature reviews and policy landscape analyses; coding qualitative data using Dedoose; analyzing data to identify trends and make meaning; supporting professional development opportunities for K-12 classroom teachers. 

The BLISS Fellow(s) will meet with one team member on a daily basis (virtual or in person) for brief check-ins, as well as participate in team meetings that occur throughout the week, including our weekly DKP team meeting, where they will report on progress, raise issues and share their work with the team. The student will also use virtual communication tools (Slack, email, shared Google files/folders) for their work and to collaborate with team members. DKP team members are on campus at least several days a week and we anticipate the student also being in person at the center 2-3 days per week. The student will learn about best practices in civic education as well as research skills, such as how to process and manage data, document research decisions/activities.

Skills Needed: We seek students with knowledge of, and interest in, any of the following areas: K-12 education (particularly with regards to social studies, history and civics) and research; US government; youth engagement, group facilitation; qualitative research methods; curriculum writing/development. An ideal candidate will be comfortable working in Google Suite, have good attention to detail, and be highly organized.

[added 2/7] Soul Searching: An Historical Exploration of the High-Stakes World of Consciousness Studies | Anne Harrington (HSCI)

Anne Harrington, Franklin L. Ford Professor of the History of Science

Twenty-five years ago, in 1998, a philosopher and a neuroscientist made a bet. The bet, proposed by neuroscientist Christoff Koch, was that, within the coming twenty-five years, cognitive scientists would be able to locate the “footprints of consciousness in the organ of consciousness, the brain.” The philosopher, David Chalmers, famous for describing consciousness as the “hard problem,” was skeptical. In the summer of 2023, following a great deal of high-profile research and presentations of results, Koch publicly conceded that he had been wrong. The problem of consciousness and the brain remained unsolved. Standing on the stage at a large international conference, he publicly gifted Chalmers a case of fine wine, while conference participants applauded his graciousness.

Moments like these get a lot of press and publicity. The general public is therefore encouraged to believe that they must be the moments that matter most. That belief is unlikely to be true. In fact, during the same 25 years that neuroscientists like Koch were attempting—unsuccessfully—to find the “footprint of consciousness” in the brain, and philosophers were laying out their views on the matter, lots of other kinds of players had also been engaged in a search to better understand consciousness. For many of these, though, the stakes at play were far higher than a case of fine wine. Some of these players have been clinicians in ICUs looking after coma patients, and unable to definitively tell families whether their loved one was at all aware, or would ever fully awaken. Some have been anesthesiologists responsible for making patients first unconscious and then conscious again, but using chemical substances — whose mechanisms they did not really understand. Others have included families and nurses caring for loved ones at the end of life, and struggling to make sense of the transformation in consciousness they sometimes witnessed. Still others have included anthropologists, clinicians, and countercultural visionaries with a range of on-the-ground experiences and interested in the possibility that experiences of deep meditation and mental transformations brought on by psychedelics might challenge conventional understandings of consciousness as a simple function of the brain.

To date, no one has attempted to document and make sense of the historical emergence of the actual pluralistic and high-stakes set of spaces we today call “consciousness studies.” This summer research opportunity offers a motivated undergraduate (and possibly two) the opportunity to go deeply into one or another strand of the story that particularly speaks to them. At the start of the summer, we will identify a range of focused research topics that the student will pursue under careful supervision. We may also do some shared readings and discuss the stakes together. The student will have the opportunity to learn how to work in both physical archives and digital archives, and improve their ability to critically read a wide range of genres of published primary sources. There may also be an opportunity to conduct oral histories with key players, for which training will be provided. Finally, frequent meetings (probably twice a week) with the faculty supervisor will be an opportunity to get ongoing feedback on the work and learn how to think well about fraught and often polarizing subjects. Towards the end of the summer, there may also be an opportunity to try on different analytic frameworks from sociology, anthropology, and science studies to make sense of what we have discovered.

Skills Needed: Prior coursework in psychology, history of science, anthropology of science, or philosophy of science is a plus, but not required. Prior experience with archival research is also helpful, but not a prerequisite. Candidates should be comfortable using bibliographic and note-taking software like Zotero (or be willing to quickly learn how to use it), know how to search through the range of digital databases available through the Harvard library system, have the discipline to work independently and enjoy reading. Above all, though, the ideal candidate will have an open mind, true curiosity, and a passion for unpacking the real human stakes at play in debates that are sometimes made to appear to be of mere abstract philosophical or scientific interest.

[added 2/8] Political Economy of Energy Transitions and Adaptation | Dustin Tingley (GOVT)

Dustin Tingley, Professor of Government

This research project focuses on the political economy of a transition from a fossil fuel-based economy into one that has more and more non-fossil fuel-based energy sources. This transition will have a huge range of consequences, including for local and state governments here in the United States but also for communities in other countries. At the same time, the physical impacts of climate change will impact the ability of governments to respond to a variety of challenges. We will document these challenges, understand how different policies are impacting this transition (or not), and better understand the range of political and financial obstacles. Students will collect data on a range of things, including taxes generated by renewable energy, expenses local communities bear due to energy and climate transitions, analyze survey data, and review media and other reporting on these topics. 

Skills Needed: Social science training; being able to code in R a plus.

[added 2/12] Exploring How Babies and Children Think About Social Relationships | Ashley Thomas (PSYC)

Ashley ThomasProfessor of Psychology

The Thomas lab explores how infants and children make sense of the social world. Specifically, we study how infants and children reason about close relationships, including caregiving relationships, intergroup relationships, social hierarchies, and group structures.

Summer interns will gain hands-on developmental research experience by working with the lab managers, graduate students, or postdoctoral fellows, closely supervised by the PI. Students will have the opportunity to learn about and contribute to different aspects of the research process, including the following:

  • Recruiting and scheduling participant families
  • Reading and discussing relevant theoretical and empirical papers
  • Assisting with experimental design
  • Creating experimental stimuli
  • Running studies with infants and children
  • Coding infant looking time responses and children behavioral responses
  • Analyzing data

Skills Needed: An interest in social cognitive development, and some experience, formal or informal, working with children.

[added 2/12] What Helps Infants Learn and Understand Words? | Elika Bergelson (PSYC)

Elika Bergelson, Associate Professor of Psychology

The Bergelson lab explores how linguistic, cognitive, and social skills contribute to word learning in infancy, and how caregiver input may scaffold learning on different timescales. We additionally explore how this process is affected for children born blind and/or Deaf/HoH. We use eyetracking, headturn preference, behavioral games, EEG and corpus methods with babies and toddlers.

BLISS Fellows will be paired with a graduate student or postdoc mentor to guide their focus on one thread of the lab’s work. Mentorship pairs will meet weekly to discuss relevant literature, project tasks, and monitor the student’s progress.

BLISS Fellows will participate in 

  • Recruiting and scheduling participant families from the greater Boston community and for online studies
  • Conducting literature reviews and familiarizing yourself with background literature
  • Collecting data using a variety of methods (e.g., EEG, eye tracking, behavioral studies, habituation, violation of expectation, corpus analysis)
  • Creating experimental stimuli and assisting with experimental design
  • Transcribing daylong audio recordings of children’s language environments
  • Coding and analyzing data (e.g., using R Studio, ELAN)
  • Assisting with write-ups
  • Attending a variety of meetings, seminars, and professional development events that will contribute to their learning of the literature and the psychology research process

Skills needed:

  • Reliable, motivated, organized, detail-oriented, enthusiastic and ready to learn
  • Experience working with children and families 
  • Particular interest in cognitive development and language acquisition
[added 2/12] A Statistical Framework to Study the Impact of Gun Violence in Schools | Davide Viviano (ECON)

Davide Viviano, incoming (fall 2024) Assistant Professor and current Postdoctoral Fellow in Economics

This project combines advanced statistical techniques with a novel data source to  study the effect of opening gun stores near schools on school gun incidents. We will use a unique and novel dataset to answer this question and develop novel econometric tools to address problems related to confounding . 

Skills needed: Students must have knowledge of coding languages (R or Python), experience with working with large datasets, and they must have taken classes in statistics/econometrics with exposure to methods in causal inference. 

[added 2/16] Renaissance Latin Poems | Ann Blair and Anja-Silvia Goeing (HIST)

Ann Blair, Carl H. Pforzheimer University Professor, and Anja-Silvia Goeing, Professor at the University of Zurich and Associate in History at Harvard University

How do science, scholarship and poems go together? How does university knowledge get transmitted? In 16th century Zurich, the physician and natural historian Conrad Gessner wrote poems in Latin and Greek to be included in his friends’ scientific publications that are so far untranslated. We have launched in 2023 a website project to exhibit samples of his poems with new English translation at https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/gzp1565. We are offering an internship for a student of Latin (or adjacent topics) to translate under their own name some of the Latin poems that Gessner wrote. Day-to-day work would involve discussions of 16th century European science and poetry with prof Ann Blair and Dr Anja-Silvia Goeing (1x per week in a training session) and supervised selection and translation of poems (1x a week mentoring session); learning about the design and technologies of the website and its Drupal platform with Harvard technology experts (3-4 sessions over the course of the internship). The training sessions include first-hand experience of 16th century book and publication history at Houghton Library. 

Skills needed: Intermediate Latin, English 

[added 2/16] Hot Summers in the City: The History of Urban Heat Waves | David Jones (HSCI)

David Jones, A. Bernard Ackerman Professor of the Culture of Medicine

Devastating heat struck Phoenix in summer 2023. Daytime highs soared pass 110° for over 50 days. Hundreds died. Heat wreaked havoc in Europe in summer 2022, killing over 60,000 people. It’s only going to get worse. Heat wave mortality, especially in cities, will be one of the direst consequences of global warming and the climate crisis. Politicians and urban planners now race to prevent and adapt to these dangers. But while the intensity of urban heat may be new, the basic problem is not. A British scientist described the “urban heat island” effect in the 1830s. By the 1870s, summer heat waves were a familiar problem in the United States. Modern readers can easily relate to some aspects of this historical heat wave discomfort and suffering. Other aspects, however, are surprising. Heat wave mortality now is highest in Black and Brown elders, but then it was highest in young white laborers. While people then, as now, died of heat stroke, many also drowned as beleaguered city dwellers—who generally did not know how to swim—sought respite from the heat in cool rivers and harbors.

The goal of this project is to reconstruct the lived experience of urban heat waves in Boston (e.g., 1853, 1872, 1892, 1911) and New York City (e.g., 1876, 1896, 1911). The first step will be to learn what historians have already written—there’s no need to reinvent the wheel. The second step will be to figure out what more can be learned. Most of the work will involve mining the rich newspapers collections (print, microfilm, and digitized) of Lamont Library and the Boston Public Library to narrate life and death during these heat waves. Other sources can be explored as well, including diaries, memoirs, sermons, fiction, art, photographs, and possibly even film. We will meet at least weekly, usually in person, and more often as needed. The student will learn how to search newspapers effectively to identify telling details and craft engaging narratives. If the student has sufficient coding skills, we can also explore quantitative analyses of newspaper databases to identify key themes in the coverage and trends over time.

Skills Needed: The fundamental prerequisites are curiosity about the lives of past humans and willingness to appreciate the humor and tragedy of life in a 19th century city. Prior course work in History of Science, History, or Anthropology is a bonus, but not required. The work demands a certain kind of attention: scanning large volumes of material in search of telling vignettes. The student should know (or be willing to learn) how to navigate Harvard’s digital resources, microfilm readers, and print collections. We will collaborate to find the right balance between independent research and useful guidance and mentorship.

[added 2/16] Tracing the Political, Legal, and Economic History of Medical Scarcity | George Aumoithe (HIST, AAAS)

George Aumoithe, Assistant Professor of History and of African and African American Studies

“Tracing the Political, Legal, and Economic History of Medical Scarcity” is a summer research program focused on assisting Prof. Aumoithe with archival and database analysis related to public hospitals, economic and fiscal public health policies, and legal cases related to nondiscrimination law in health. The method is primarily archival and may involve examining Prof. Aumoithe’s personal database of photocopied archival sources, investigating archival sources located at Harvard, and finding and analyzing Excel datasheets from U.S. federal and state agencies as well as non-governmental entities. Research assistants would produce meta-analyses of secondary literature, tabulate basic statistics, and create charts that visualize numerical data for illustrative purposes. Research assistants may also conduct fact-checking of existing manuscript material and learn how to proofread and copyedit scholarly material.

Skills needed: All applicants with skills in Microsoft Word, Excel, Google Docs, FileMaker Pro, or other similar database software, are welcome to apply. Students with experience in ArcMap GIS or other spatial analysis software are also welcome to apply.

[added 2/21] Power Dynamics in the Global South | Pia Raffler (GOVT)

Pia Raffler, Assistant Professor of Government

How can governments be held responsible for acting in citizens’ interests in low-income countries where oversight institutions are often weak? In particular, under what conditions are politicians willing and able to fulfill their mandate to oversee bureaucracies? This book project builds on (field) experimental work from Uganda showing that (a) (local) politicians often have limited control over the bureaucracy, (b) their incentives to engage in greater oversight are conditioned by partisan politics and can result in improved service provision, and (c) weak political oversight has negative downstream effects on electoral accountability. To broaden the geographic scope of the project, I am currently working with a team of RAs to conduct an expert survey on the power dynamics between local bureaucrats and politicians across the Global South and to collect related data from Indian states.

In a separate but related project, I am working with Horacio Larreguy (ITAM) on a review article on accountability in developing democracies for the Annual Review of Political Science (ARPS). This article will survey the recent literature on two recent trends which we see as shaping accountability relationships across the Global South in important ways: the increasing prevalence of social media and political polarization.

This summer, I will work on three tasks on which I would love to collaborate with an RA. These include, first, complementing, cleaning, and analyzing the dataset on power dynamics between local bureaucrats and politicians across the Global South. This data will speak to three questions: 1) How prevalent is weak political oversight over the bureaucracy? 2) What characteristics predict it? 3) Is it the case, as my argument implies, that local politicians are formally more marginalized in places with dominant parties at the state or national level? Second, reviewing the related literature and analyzing existing datasets for a deep dive in local government dynamics across Indian states for a case study in the book. This case study will answer the same three questions as just listed, but on the subnational level. Third, contribute to the ARPS review by identifying and synthesizing recently published articles relating to the role of social media and political participation for accountability in developing democracies. We have drawn up a theoretical framework and structure for the article and will need help with the actual review and, perhaps, writing. An ideal RA will work with me on completing the databases, developing and implementing empirical tests, and making sense of the findings together; as well as identifying, reading, and synthesizing recent related academic work and discussing the emerging takeaways. The position is ideal for someone with statistical programming skills who wants to learn about the research process from hypothesis test to situating in the literature to write-up.

My goal as mentor in BLISS is, as with all undergraduate research assistants, that students get an overall view of the research process. Beyond helping with the tasks outlines above, my goal is to ensure that students get familiar with the related literature, how the project fits into this literature, and the contribution of the project towards filling a specific gap in our collective knowledge. As such, I emphasize developing a joint understanding of the rationale behind the project and any particular task. This works in everyone’s interest: When students comprehend the type of analysis we aim to conduct, it is easier for them to understand and contribute fully. To foster a collaborative process and a deep understanding, I will employ a hands-on approach with weekly or bi-weekly meetings and an open-door policy.

Skills Needed: I expect to work with undergraduates with a strong quantitative focus that have ideally taken an intermediate statistics or econometrics course and have slightly-beyond-basic training in Stata or related software that entails coding (e.g., R). A quantitative mindset and some basic training in a software structured around coding avoid spending a few weeks bringing students up to speed. An interest in synthesizing large amounts of information and substantive interest in political accountability in the Global South are ideal. The student working on the project will leave with a proficient knowledge of statistical programming, formulating and designing empirical social science projects, and synthesizing and structuring large amounts of information.