Student Profile

Humans of SEAS: Janet Chen, A.B. '19

By Manasa Joshyam, SEAS Correspondent

"One of the really nice things about the undergraduate CS program at Harvard is that, even with honors, it’s only 12 credits, so there’s a lot of freedom to explore—especially psychology, which is my secondary field, as well as philosophy or history. Part of the exploration has been seeing a lot of ties between what I've learned in CS and what I'm learning in other classes. For instance, this past fall I took CS 136, which is Computational Economics. There’s a lot of game theory involved, and now I'm taking a government class on international political economy. This semester I am also doing an independent study with Professor Ashley Whillans, and one of her grad students, at the Harvard Business School on a project about creativity and resource scarcity. So, the question we’re asking is: if, and if so under what conditions, does resource scarcity affect the creativity of solutions? The topic of my independent study is actually applying that to the startup industry. I think there's a lot of street wisdom in that industry, about funding in particular and whether it's good to get a lot of funding and therefore get your name out there and attract talent, or not relying on a lot of funding because you want that feeling of scarcity, like having your back up against the wall, to force you to be creative. I think a lot of the discourse on the topic has largely been from the industry—the investors or founders—and I think it'll be really cool to take a look at this industry through the organizational behavior point of view and run some analytics on some pretty good models of startup success and quantify start up creativity as a function of how much funding they receive, which is a question I'm really interested in.” — Janet Chen, A.B. '19, computer science