Susan Hockfield on Achievements in Office
  Susan Hockfield     Biography    
Recorded: 19 Jan 2024

Among the greatest achievements for me, and again, I wouldn't call them mine because they were all just putting a challenge out there and having people coalesce around it. So, for biology with engineering, we are now sitting in my office, which I elected after my presidency to have in the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, a wonderfully crazy mashup of biologists and engineers and clinicians to accelerate progress against cancer. So incredibly successful, I can hardly describe it. It's a place that just makes me feel encouraged about the future. Another was the Energy Initiative, so we launched an Energy Initiative and did it as a all of campus thing. We couldn't put several hundred faculty in one place. The energy future is being innovated everywhere at MIT and so we got great support to be able to catalyze projects. I think when I stepped down, something like 25% of the faculty had received funding from the Energy Initiative to do energy projects. I mean, you don't get 25% of the faculty to do anything except complain that the food's bad. So that was hugely successful in terms of creating a force. It also amplified MIT's voice in Washington. Different from Yale and different from most universities, MIT has a voice in Washington, has connections in Washington, and we consider part of our mission to actually influence government policy.

Susan Hockfield is a neuroscientist whose research focuses on brain development and glioma, pioneering the use of monoclonal antibody technology demonstrating that early experience results in lasting changes in the molecular structure of the brain. She is a Professor of Neuroscience and President Emerita at MIT. She was the first woman and life scientist to serve as MIT’s sixteenth president from 2004-2012.

Hockfield earned her B.A. in biology from the University of Rochester (1973) and a Ph.D. from Georgetown University at the School of Medicine (1979). In 1980, Hockfield completed an NIH postdoctoral fellowship at the University of California at San Francisco. She then joined the scientific staff at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, New York where she ran her own lab for five years. She also served as director of the Summer Neurobiology Program from 1985 to 1997. In 1985, Hockfield became the William Edward Gilbert Professor of Neurobiology at Yale University. She went on to serve as the Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences from 1998-2002, and Provost from 2003-2004.

In December 2004, Hockfield assumed office as the president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She held this role until June 2012 and continues to hold a faculty appointment as professor of neuroscience and as a member of the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research.

Hockfield has received numerous awards including the Charles Judson Herrick Award from the American Association of Anatomists, the Wilbur Lucius Cross Award from the Yale University Graduate School, the Meliora Citation from the University of Rochester, the Amelia Earhart Award from the Women’s Union, and the Yale Science and Engineering Association 2021 Award for Distinguished Service to Industry, Commerce or Education.

She also holds honorary degrees from Brown University, Duke University, Georgetown University, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, New York University, Northeastern University, Tsinghua University (Beijing), Université Pierre et Marie Curie, University of Edinburgh, University of Massachusetts Medical School, University of Rochester, and the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory School of Biological Sciences.

OTHER TOPICS for
Susan Hockfield
LIFE IN SCIENCE
JAMES D. WATSON
CSHL