Apologies for the confusion, this announcement has the correct date and more 
information about the Forum. Please disregard the previous announcement for 
this event. 


From Seth Mnookin and the MIT Communications Forum:


Greetings All —
You are invited to join the Communications Forum next Thursday, February 26, 
for the first event of this very snowy semester. 


Women in Science: A Panel Discussion

Thursday, February 26, 2015 
5:00 - 7:00 pm
66-110 <http://whereis.mit.edu/?go=66>

The achievements of women in science have often been overlooked or ignored. 
Today, a new generation of female scientists is making clear just how different 
the future will be. Harvard’s Pardis Sabeti 
<http://sabetilab.org/people/pardis-sabeti>, a computational geneticist who 
investigates the evolution of disease, and MIT’s Jessika Trancik 
<https://esd.mit.edu/Faculty_Pages/trancik/trancik.html>, whose research 
focuses on the environmental impacts of energy technology, will discuss their 
backgrounds, career paths, and what they see as challenges and opportunities 
moving forward. Moderator: MIT’s Rosalind Williams 
<http://rosalindwilliams.com/>. 

Speakers

Pardis Sabeti <http://sabetilab.org/people/pardis-sabeti> is an Associate 
Professor at the Center for Systems Biology at Harvard University, Department 
of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, and in the Department of Immunology and 
Infectious Disease at Harvard School of Public Health, and is a Senior 
Associate Member of the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT. Dr. Sabeti is a 
computational geneticist with expertise studying genetic diversity, developing 
algorithms to detect genetic signatures of natural selection, and carrying out 
genetic association studies. She completed her undergraduate degree at MIT and 
her PhD at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar, before returning to earn her medical 
degree from Harvard Medical School as a Soros Fellow.

Jessika Trancik <https://esd.mit.edu/Faculty_Pages/trancik/trancik.html> is the 
Atlantic Richfield Career Development Assistant Professor of Energy Studies in 
the Engineering Systems Division at MIT. She is also an external professor at 
the Santa Fe Institute. She received her B.S. in materials science and 
engineering from Cornell University and her Ph.D. in materials science from the 
University of Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar. Before MIT, she spent several years 
at the Santa Fe Institute as an Omidyar Fellow, and at Columbia University as 
an Earth Institute Fellow, where her research focused on energy systems 
modeling. Her research group studies the dynamic costs and environmental 
impacts of energy technologies to inform technology design and policy.

Rosalind Williams <http://web.mit.edu/sts/people/williams.html> is the Bern 
Dibner Professor of the History of Science and Technology at MIT. She attended 
Wellesley College and received degrees from Harvard University (B.A. History 
and Literature), the University of California at Berkeley (M.A. Modern European 
History) and the University of Massachusetts at Amherst (Ph.D. History). Her 
first three books (Dream Worlds, Notes from the Underground, and Retooling) all 
examined the implications for human life, both individual and collective, of 
living in a predominantly self-constructed world. Her most recent book, The 
Triumph of Human Empire, surveys the overarching historical event of our time: 
the rise and triumph of human empire, defined by the dominance of human 
presence on the planet. 



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