
Gift from Dick Larson establishes Distinguished Professorship in Data, Systems, and Society
The MIT Institute for Data, Systems, and Society (IDSS) announces the creation of a new endowed chair made possible by the generosity of IDSS professor and “MIT lifer” Richard ‘Dick’ Larson. Effective July 1st, the fund provides a full professorship for senior IDSS faculty: the Distinguished Professorship in Data, Systems, and Society.
“As a faculty member, MIT has not only accepted but embraced my several mid-career changes of direction,” says Larson. “I have called five different academic departments my home, starting with Electrical Engineering (that is what it was called in the 1960’s) and now finalized with the interdepartmental, interdisciplinary IDSS – Institute for Data, Systems and Society. Those beautiful three words — “Data, Systems, Society” — they represent my energy and commitment over the second half of my career. My gifted Chair is an effort to keep alive those three words, with others following me doing research, teaching and mentoring centered around ‘Data, Systems, Society.’”
Larson’s career has focused his operations research and systems expertise on a wide variety of problems, in both public and private sectors. His contributions span the fields of urban service systems (especially emergency response systems), disaster planning, pandemics, queueing, logistics, technology-enabled education, smart-energy houses, and workforce planning. His latest book, Model Thinking for Everyday Life, draws on decades of experience as a champion of STEM education at MIT and beyond, such as his leadership of MIT BLOSSOMS.
“Dick Larson has been making an impact at MIT for over half a century,” says IDSS director Fotini Christia, Ford International Professor in Political Science. “This gift extends his already considerable legacy and ensures his impact will continue to be felt for many years to come.”
Christia is pleased to share that IDSS and Brain and Cognitive Science professor Alexander ‘Sasha’ Rakhlin has been named the inaugural holder of the new professorship. The selection recognizes Rakhlin’s distinguished scholarly record, dedicated service to IDSS, excellence in teaching, and contributions to research in statistics and computation.
“Sasha’s analysis of neural network complexity, and his work developing tools for online prediction, are perfect examples of research which builds bridges across disciplines, and also connects different departments and units at MIT,” said Michale Fee, the Glen V. and Phyllis F. Dorflinger Professor of Neuroscience, and Department Head of Brain and Cognitive Sciences. “It’s wonderful to see Sasha’s contributions recognized in this way, and I’m grateful to Dick Larson for supporting this vision.”
Rakhlin’s research is in machine learning, with an emphasis on statistics and computation. He is interested in formalizing the process of learning, in analyzing learning models, and in deriving and implementing emerging learning methods. A significant thrust of his research is in developing theoretical and algorithmic tools for online prediction, a learning framework where data arrives in a sequential fashion.
“I am honored to be the inaugural holder of the Distinguished Professorship in Data, Systems, and Society,” says Rakhlin. “Professor Larson’s commitment to education and service to MIT both serve as models to follow.”