Who we are and what we do
The Program for the Human Environment recognizes the
growing connection between the biological and other research
underway at The Rockefeller University and environmental concerns.
The Program houses research, organizes
meetings on topics of interest to the campus community, hosts
visiting scientists in environmental fields, and encourages
collaborations between faculty and students. The Program is
responsible for communicating widely the scientific results of
environmental studies involving the University in an effort to
inform environmental practices and policies. It also houses
selected studies concerned with the health of the scientific
enterprise.
Our core group consists of Perrin
Meyer, Mark Stoeckle,
Jason Yung, Doris Manville,
Veselin Kostov,
Smriti Rao,
and me, networked with, and (over)stimulated by
associates in New Haven, Woods Hole, D.C., California (north &
south), Guelph, Laxenburg, Florence, Jerusalem, and elsewhere. We
enjoy ongoing association with our alumni, including
Nadejda Makarova Victor,
Tony Barrett,
Iddo Wernick,
Andrew Johnson, Peter Elias, and Dionel
Lopez.
We continue to explore how long-run technical change relates to
productivity and efficiency of energy, materials, land, and other
resources, and the consequences for human populations. In essence
we seek to elaborate the technical vision of a micro-emissions
society. This vision is realized in part by industrial ecology, the study
of the network of industrial processes as they interact with each
other and live off each other, especially in the sense of direct
use of each other's material and energy wastes and products. We
work on diverse case studies including zero-emission power plants,
nitrogen, and cadmium (an element good for batteries and harmful to
health and behavior). In analytical methods, we remain deeply
interested in statistical analysis of long time-series of
environment-related data, and models of growth and diffusion,
especially Lotka-Volterra dynamical systems, which we pursue under
the rubric of Loglets ("logistic
wavelets"). We believe we can explain a lot of about the
last 10,000 years and predict a lot about the next 1,000.
In my concurrent role as a program director with the Alfred P.
Sloan Foundation, I am participating in the organization and conduct
of an international research program to assess and explain the
diversity, distribution, and abundance of life in the oceans, The Census of Marine Life. Involvement in
the marine census brought us in contact with environmental genomics,
and we are now exploring and advancing use of very short DNA sequences
for species identification, the so-called "Barcode of Life."
Also under Sloan auspices, some of our work continues to examine
the scientific and academic enterprise per se. We helped create the
first interactive simulation model of a university, Virtual U., a "serious game" now
freely available and widely used for educating managers in higher
education.
We also help organize the Insight Lectures and Cohn Forum at
Rockefeller University.
Jesse H. Ausubel
Director, Program for the Human Environment,
The Rockefeller University, New York, NY
Click here for directions on getting to
our office, including maps.
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