STUDENT PROFILES
Arkus investigates the mathematics of aging: the key molecular events that cause organisms, from yeast to human beings, to grow old and die.
Natalie Arkus
Applied Mathematics
Affiliations
Engineering and Applied Sciences
Harvard Medical School
Paul F. Glenn Laboratories for the Biological Mechanisms of Aging (BBS Program)
Education
Columbia University, B.A. in Physics and Mathematical Biology; M.S. in Applied Mathematics
There are many things that drew me to Harvard and to the School in particular. I only looked at programs that reported an openness and a drive toward interdisciplinary research.
It's funny because there were many other institutions that claimed to do interdisciplinary research, but, once you visited them or looked at the research they were producing, you could see they really weren't.
Quite honestly, when I visited SEAS I was bombarded with people who were doing interesting work in mathematical biology and biophysics. Harvard is really vibrant and exciting; one of the reasons I decided to come here (and it seems also to be a reason that many of my other friends in the program decided to come here) is the atmosphere that you're in---you're around people who will push you, who have a robust background, and whose opinions you would like to hear.
The great thing about SEAS is that it's so flexible---as long as you can convince someone that something is worth doing, you can do it!
WIRED says of CS grad student David Milan's podcast of CS E-1: "If every undergrad watched this series, IT help desks would be out of business." Go ahead and tune in!
Aaron Dollar (who just successfully defended his PhD thesis) took first place in the 2006 ASME Student Mechanism Design Competition in Philadelphia for his design for "A Robust robotic hand."
Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC) announced that a team of graduate students from Harvard University won first place in the SRC/SIA SoC Design Challenge.
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