HEALTH SCIENCES & SEMICONDUCTORS: SHAPING THE FUTURE OF PERSONALIZED HEALTHCARE
Imagine a future where breakthroughs in health sciences and semiconductors converge to accelerate discovery, transform medicine, and deliver personalized care at scale. This November, join the world’s leading minds in health sciences and semiconductors for a one-day symposium that will redefine what’s possible in healthcare innovation.
You’ll be part of a dynamic community of clinicians, researchers, investors, and industry pioneers. Together, we’ll explore the latest advances, tackle the toughest challenges, and chart new pathways from research to real-world impact. The afternoon features high-energy sessions with renowned clinicians, top researchers, and venture experts, designed to ignite collaboration and inspire action.
Date: November 20, 2025
Time: Registration at 9:30 AM | Program begins at 10:00 AM
Location: The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Merkin Building, 415 Main St, Cambridge, MA 02142
Why attend:
- See the whole translation pathway, from publicly funded research to commercialization and clinical deployment
- Panels that span patient-focused implementation and venturing, and advancements in AI for health devices
- Spot emerging opportunities with short lightning talks from pioneering projects that showcase where collaboration can drive rapid progress
View the agenda and register now here!
We look forward to seeing you there!
TEACHING + LEARNING LAB (TLL) SPEAKER SERIES
Please join us for the November session of our TLL Speaker Series!
Compass: An Experiment in Collaboration
Last spring, the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences (SHASS) launched the pilot of its new multidisciplinary offering, 21.01 Compass Course: Love, Death, and Taxes: How to Think–and Talk to Others–About Being Human. The course is designed to expose students with the tools of the humanities and social sciences to consider persistent moral and social questions central to the human experience, ultimately guiding them in shaping the kind of humans they want to be and the society they wish to help create.
Compass is the result of a multi-year collaboration involving over 30 faculty from 19 departments, led by a core SHASS team and a student advisory board. Members of the Compass team, including Lily Tsai, Adam Albright, Emily Richmond Pollock, and Leela Fredlund, will discuss the challenges and rewards of large collaborations. They will show how collaborative design resulted in a Compass pedagogy that highlights the unexpected results of multidisciplinary conversations and fosters faculty vulnerability through the teaching of unfamiliar topics, transforming the class into a true collaboration between faculty and students.
Thursday, November 13 at 3pm via Zoom
All are welcome! Please register via Zoom.
About the Speakers:
Lily L. Tsai is the Director and Founder of the MIT Governance Lab (MIT GOV/LAB) and the Ford Professor of Political Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), as well as the former Chair of the MIT Faculty. Her research focuses on accountability, governance, and political participation in developing contexts, particularly in Asia and Africa. In 2014, she founded MIT GOV/LAB, a group of social and behavioral scientists and design researchers who develop and test innovations in citizen engagement and government responsiveness. By focusing on how and why citizens become active in engaging their governments, Tsai aims to bridge researcher and practitioner communities by developing learning collaborations that can respond to governance challenges using empirical evidence in real time. Tsai has written two books, When People Want Punishment: Retributive Justice and the Puzzle of Authoritarian Popularity, and Accountability Without Democracy: Solidarity Groups and Public Goods Provision in Rural China, as well as articles in The American Political Science Review, The Journal of Politics, Comparative Political Studies,Political Behavior, Comparative Politics, and World Development.
Emily Richmond Pollock is an Associate Professor of Music. Emily’s research focuses particularly on conservatism, the historicization of modernist musical value, operatic institutions, and the relationship between modern musical style and convention. Emily joined Music and Theater Arts in 2012 and regularly teaches 21M.011 Introduction to Western Music and courses on opera, the twentieth century, and the symphonic repertoire, as well as the Advanced Seminar for music majors. She is currently the music major advisor and has served in the past as a Burchard Faculty Fellow and as an advisor to first-years and music concentrators. She remains an active amateur oboist, performing with the Cambridge Symphony Orchestra and the Mercury Orchestra.
Adam Albright received his BA in linguistics from Cornell University in 1996 and his Ph.D. in linguistics from UCLA in 2002. He was a Faculty Fellow at the University of California, Santa Cruz from 2002-2004, and is currently a Professor at MIT. His research interests include phonology, morphology, and learnability, with an emphasis on using computational modeling and experimental techniques to investigate issues in phonological theory. Other interests include: Yiddish phonology and morphology; Lakhota phonology and morphology (and many other topics in Lakhota); and the proper treatment of historical change within Optimality Theory.
Please visit the Teaching + Learning Lab website to learn more about this seminar as well as our upcoming events and programs!
2025 IRWIN M. ARIAS SYMPOSIUM
The first Irwin M. Arias, M.D. Symposium was held in 1991, and the theme of the event was – as it remains today – Bridging Basic Science and Liver Disease.
This unique one-day program brings together hundreds of leading biomedical scientists and physicians from across the globe and is designed to bridge the remarkable advances in basic biology and engineering with the understanding of liver diseases and their treatment. Research presented over the past 34 years has led to advances in the diagnosis and treatment of virtually all liver diseases in children and adults.
This year’s Annual Irwin Arias Symposium, with a theme of ‘building bridges’ within and beyond the liver research community, and spanning across academic, clinical, and translational research teams, will be held in person at the Broad Institute on Tuesday, December 2.
The full-day program will include 12 prominent speakers, a trainee poster competition over lunch, the opportunity for junior scientists to deliver 3 minute ‘Microtalks’ as part of the main program, and a wine and cheese reception. We are also offering a hybrid option so that distant attendees will be able to watch the program live, from anywhere in the world.
The 2025 symposium will be offered both in-person and virtually. In-person attendees will benefit from a poster session and networking opportunities with plenary speakers and other attendees. Breakfast, lunch, and a networking reception will also be provided to in-person attendees.
We welcome participation from researchers at every stage of their careers, and invite them to share perspectives from their academic, industrial, and clinical research settings. Trainees who are interested in presenting a micro-talk (in-person or virtually) or poster (in-person only) should submit an abstract with their registration.
**October 31, 2025 is the deadline for abstract submissions for the Poster competition (and consideration for a trainee Microtalk invitation).
We hope you will register today. Our partners at the American Liver Foundation have worked with sponsors to enable the program to be provided free of any charge to all academic attendees.
If you have any questions about this event, please contact reasearch [at] liverfoundation.org (research[at]liverfoundation[dot]org).
We look forward to making this the most engaging Arias Symposium yet!
2025 MILDRED S. DRESSELHAUS LECTURE
The Dresselhaus Lecture series is named in honor of Mildred "Millie" Dresselhaus, a beloved MIT professor whose research helped unlock the mysteries of carbon, the most fundamental of organic elements—earning her the nickname “queen of carbon science.” This annual event recognizes a significant figure in science and engineering from anywhere in the world whose leadership and impact echo Millie’s life, accomplishments, and values.
Join MIT.nano for the 2025 Dresselhaus Lecture!
"Printing soft and living matter in three dimensions"
The ability to pattern soft and living matter in three dimensions is of critical importance for several emerging applications. In this talk, Lewis will begin by describing the design of printable materials for direct and embedded 3D printing. She will then introduce representative functional, structural, and biological inks as well as sophisticated printhead designs for fabricating soft materials ranging from soft electronics to robotic matter. Finally, Lewis will highlight our efforts to create vascularized human tissues via a tight integration of stem cell biology, organoid building blocks, and bioprinting.
Monday, November 3 from 4-5 pm in MIT 10-250
Reception to follow!
Speaker:
Jennifer Lewis
Hansjörg Wyss Professor of Biologically Inspired Engineering
John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
Wyss Institute, Harvard University
Jennifer Lewis is the Hansjörg Wyss Professor of Biologically Inspired Engineering at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences and a Core Faculty Member at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering. Her research focuses on the digital manufacturing of functional, structural, and biological materials. Multiple startups are commercializing technology from her lab ranging from 3D printed electronics to kidney therapeutics. She is an elected member of the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, National Academy of Inventors, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Lewis has received numerous awards for her work, including the NAS James Prize for Science and Technology Integration.
REGISTER HERE
If you have further questions about this event, please contact mitnano [at] mit.edu (mitnano[at]mit[dot]edu) or visit the MIT.nano website.
HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL 2025 HEALTH CARE CONFERENCE
We are excited to announce the 23rd Annual HBS Health Care Conference, a student-run conference at Harvard Business School with 600+ attendees each year. The healthcare ecosystem is at a pivotal moment. From scientific breakthroughs to digital innovation to global shifts in policy and funding, the way care is delivered, financed, and experienced is being redefined.
This year’s theme—“Catalyzing Healthcare’s Next Chapter”—calls for bold innovation and concrete action. Expect a full day of keynotes, panels, and networking with leaders driving the transformation of healthcare.
Saturday, November 15 at Harvard Business School (Klarman Hall)
Highlights include:
- Keynotes on scaling disruptive business models, reimagining healthcare with AI, and investing & transformation in life sciences — delivered by renowned industry leader.
- 20 Panels covering digital health, therapeutics, value-based care, investing, global markets, and more.
Meet the entrepreneurs building tomorrow’s healthcare solutions!
Featured speakers include:
- Todd Park — Former U.S. CTO & Co-Founder, Devoted Health
- Andrew Adams — Group VP, Eli Lilly
- Adam Koppel — Partner, Bain Capital Life Sciences
- Dominic King — VP of Health, Microsoft AI
- Reva Nohria — Partner, General Catalyst
- Tanay Tandon — Co-Founder & CEO, Commure (formerly Athelas)
- Jeffrey Ries — Partner, JP Morgan Health
REGISTER HERE
To learn more about the conference's schedule of events or if you have any questions and would like to get in touch with the organizers, please visit the HBC Health Care Club's website.
MIT NEUROTECH 2025
Neurotech 2025 presents talks by neurotechnology pioneers, whose cutting-edge innovations are changing the face of neurobiological research from molecules to cognition.
Friday, October 31 from 10am-5pm in the Singleton Auditorium, MIT 46-3002 (43 Vassar Street Cambridge, MA 02139) followed by a reception from 5-6pm.
Speakers Include:
- Anna Devor
Boston University - Michael Fox
Harvard Medical School/Brigham and Women's Hospital - Jeff W. Lichtman
Harvard University - Madeline Oudin
Tufts University - Xiao Wang
MIT/Broad Institute - Xin Yu
Harvard Medical School/Massachusetts General Hospital
The Symposium is free and open to the public, but seating is limited and registration is required. Lunch will be provided while supplies last.
REGISTER HERE
If you have any questions, please contact cnbe-admin [at] mit.edu (cnbe-admin[at]mit[dot]edu). To view the full agenda and learn more about the symposium, please visit their website.
This event is sponsored by the MIT Center for Neurobiological Engineering (CNBE), the McGovern Institute, the Picower Institute, the department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, and the department of Biological Engineering.
AHLI CONFERENCE ON HEALTH, INFERENCE, AND LEARNING - CALL FOR PAPERS
The AHLI Conference on Health, Inference, and Learning (CHIL) solicits work across a variety of disciplines at the intersection of machine learning and health. CHIL 2026 invites submissions focused on artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML) techniques that address opportunities and challenges in health, which we view broadly as including clinical healthcare, public health, population health, and beyond.
Authors are invited to submit 8-10 page papers (with unlimited pages for references) to one of 3 tracks: Models and Methods, Applications and Practice, or Impact and Society. Each track is described in detail below.
Important Dates
- Submissions open: Wednesday, December 10, 2025
- Submissions due: Wednesday, February 4, 2026
- Author notification: Thursday, April 9, 2026
- CHIL conference: June 28-30 2026
Tracks & Topics
- Track 1: Models and Methods: Algorithms, Inference, and Estimation
- Track 2: Applications and Practice: Investigation, Evaluation, Interpretation, and Deployment
- Track 3: Impact and Society: Policy, Public Health, Social Outcomes, and Economics
For more information on the scope of each track, submission details and guidelines, and contact information, please visit the Call for Papers page on our website or reach out to us at chil [at] ahli.cc (chil[at]ahli[dot]cc).
We look forward to reading your submissions!
BRIDGERD: CLINICAL GENETICS MEETS FUNCTIONAL GENOMICS FOR RARE DISEASES
Many rare disease patients today still face long "diagnostic odysseys" and low diagnosis yields. The accurate clinical interpretation of rare and novel variants remains a major barrier to diagnosis and treatment.
Currently, clinicians and researchers approach variant analysis very differently. Most clinical genetics insights originate from basic research, yet functional genomics researchers often lack the clinical context necessary to design models that accurately reflect real patient phenotypes. Conversely, clinicians either have limited awareness of genetics or struggle to find researchers with relevant expertise for their patients’ conditions.
BridgeRD aims to address this disconnect by:
- Raising awareness of shared and unique challenges across disciplines
- Foster cross-disciplinary collaboration
- Highlight key tools and databases that can help bridge the gap between clinical insight and functional variant analysis
BridgeRD2025 is excited to host a variety of opportunities to learn, collaborate, and brainstorm solutions to challenges in studying and treating rare disease:
- Speaker Series: Talks from leaders in clinical genetics, functional genomics, and AI (available in person and live stream online).
- Networking opportunities: structured lunch for in-person attendees
- Interactive Problem-solving Workshop: Explore and generate cross-disciplinary initiatives to improve rare disease diagnostics and treatment (Limited seats available. Please indicate your interest in participating in the in-person registration form, and we will reach out)
Wednesday November 12 from 9am-3pm at both the Whitehead Institute and Online
REGISTER HERE
We invite clinicians, clinical variant scientists, basic science researchers, and AI scientists to accelerate efforts to functionally characterize rare variants, improve clinical care, and drive the field forward.
Practicing clinicians, trainees, and academic and industry professionals are welcome to share their insights and explore potential cross-disciplinary initiatives for accelerating the diagnosis and treatment of rare diseases.
Please join us to see how cutting-edge science and research collide to tackle rare diseases head-on!
CRITICAL ISSUES IN TUMOR MICROENVIRONMENT, ANGIOGENESIS, METASTASIS AND IMMUNOLOGY COURSE: 40TH ANNIVERSARY
The “40th Annual Critical Issues in Tumor Microenvironment: Angiogenesis, Metastasis and Immunology” course, directed by Professor Rakesh K. Jain, will continue to offer the best in critical analysis of what is currently known about the tumor microenvironment, including lectures covering: angiogenesis, metastasis, immunology, metabolism, microbiome, chronobiology, cancer-neuroscience, chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapies, and integrating physical sciences, and AI in oncology. The faculty is internationally recognized. They will present their latest findings from their clinics and laboratories.
The goal of this course is to highlight key gaps in present knowledge of cancer and outline future directions for research at the bench and in the clinic.
The course will return to a four-day in person format in Boston, MA from November 10-14, 2025.
Learning formats will include didactic lectures, trainee-led Q&A and group discussions. The faculty will encourage an open discussion and will provide critical comments on challenges and future opportunities in research in cancer and in establishment of novel therapy approaches and biomarkers to guide treatment.
The aim of this course is to analyze and synthesize the most up-to-date findings. Our faculty will present valuable information in a systematic and comprehensive framework, along with a critical review of various measurement techniques. This course is dedicated to helping to improve clinical translation of this knowledge and competence, leading to improved cancer treatment.
To celebrate the 40th anniversary, we have added a special Trainee-focused 5th day to our course where the course participants will have the opportunity to present scientific posters, followed by a roundtable discussion session on career guidance for junior scientists, clinicians, and engineers.
For comprehensive information about this course, including faculty, schedule, location, and pricing, please visit the 40thCritical Issues in Tumor Microenvironment: Angiogenesis, Metastasis and Immunology website
We are happy to offer a discount of 50% off to Harvard and MIT affiliated scholars. In addition, Harvard will provide an additional tuition discount of 10% for groups of 5, and 20% discount for groups of 10 or more. Please contact tuccello [at] mgh.harvard.edu (tuccello[at]mgh[dot]harvard[dot]edu) for the discount codes.
We look forward to having you join us for the 40th Anniversary of this course!
MIT SLOAN HEALTH SYSTEMS INITIATIVE (HSI) LUNCH SEMINAR SERIES
New sessions of the HSI Lunch Seminar Series will be advertised here when available.
UPCOMING INSTITUTE COMMUNITY & EQUITY OFFICE (ICEO) EVENTS
A calendar of upcoming events is available here.
MEDICAL DEVELOPMENT GROUP BOSTON - EVENTS
The Medical Development Group Boston (MDG Boston) is a community of individuals professionally committed to the Medical Device and other Medical Technology Industry segments united by the belief that innovation and advances in technology lead to substantial improvements in health care.
MDG's Mission is to contribute to the continuing development of medical devices and other medical technologies by enhancing the professional development of its members, fostering and supporting entrepreneurial thinking, serving as a forum for exploration of new business opportunities, and promoting best practices in enterprise management.
MDG pursues this mission through the organization of educational programs and forums: the facilitation of cross-disciplinary dialogue and collaboration; the creation of venues for networking and information sharing for current and aspiring professionals, clinicians, and entrepreneurs; and the development of alliances with complementary organizations.
We would love for you to attend and spread the word in your community!
For more information on our upcoming events, visit our website.
BRAINMAP SEMINARS
Future topics will be similar to the previous Brainmap season, with some talks on Optogenetics, MR-PET, BOLD physiology, ultra-high field MRI, multimodal integration, contrast agents, and many more exciting topics! Unless otherwise noted, seminars (webinars) are held on Wednesdays at noon.
Find out about Brainmap here. Sign up here for our mailing list, in order to receive notices about our upcoming seminars.