Dean Agustín Rayo and the MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences (SHASS) recently welcomed 14 new professors to the MIT community. They arrive with diverse backgrounds and vast knowledge in their areas of research.
Naoki Egami joins MIT as an associate professor in the Department of Political Science. He is also a faculty affiliate of the Institute for Data, Systems, and Society. Egami specializes in political methodology and develops statistical methods for questions in political science and the social sciences. His current research programs focus on three areas: external validity and generalizability; machine learning and artificial intelligence for the social sciences; and causal inference with network and spatial data. His work has appeared in various academic journals in political science, statistics, and computer science, such as American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, Journal of the American Statistical Association, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society (Series B), NeurIPS, and Science Advances. Before joining MIT, Egami was an assistant professor at Columbia University. He received a PhD from Princeton University (2020) and a BA from the University of Tokyo (2015).
Valentin Figueroa joins the Department of Political Science as an assistant professor. His research examines historical state building, ideological change, and scientific innovation, with a regional focus on Western Europe and Latin America. His current book project investigates the disestablishment of patrimonial administrations and the rise of bureaucratic states in early modern Europe. Before joining MIT, he was an assistant professor at the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. Originally from Argentina, Figueroa holds a BA and an MA in political science from Universidad de San Andrés and Universidad Torcuato Di Tella, respectively, and a PhD in political science from Stanford University.
Bailey Flanigan is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science, with a shared appointment in the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Her research combines tools from across these disciplines — including social choice theory, game theory, algorithms, statistics, and survey methods — to advance political methodology and strengthen public participation in democracy. She is specifically interested in sampling algorithms, opinion measurement/preference elicitation, and the design of democratic innovations like deliberative minipublics and participatory budgeting. Before joining MIT, Flanigan was a postdoc at Harvard University’s Data Science Initiative. She earned her PhD in computer science from Carnegie Mellon University and her BS in bioengineering from the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
Rachel Fraser is an associate professor in the Department of Linguistics and Philosophy. Before coming to MIT, Fraser taught at Oxford University, where she also completed her graduate work in philosophy. She has interests in epistemology, language, feminism, aesthetics, and political philosophy. At present, her main project is a book manuscript on the epistemology of narrative.
Brian Hedden PhD ’12 is a professor in the Department of Linguistics and Philosophy, with a shared appointment in the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. His research focuses on how we ought to form beliefs and make decisions. He works in epistemology, decision theory, and ethics, including ethics of AI. He is the author of “Reasons without Persons: Rationality, Identity, and Time” (Oxford University Press, 2015) and articles on topics including collective action problems, legal standards of proof, algorithmic fairness, and political polarization, among others. Prior to joining MIT, he was a faculty member at the Australian National University and the University of Sydney, and a junior research fellow at Oxford. He received his BA From Princeton University in 2006 and his PhD from MIT in 2012.
Rebekah Larsen is an assistant professor in the Comparative Media Studies/Writing program. A media sociologist with a PhD from Cambridge University, her work uncovers and analyzes understudied media ecosystems, with special attention to sociotechnical change and power relations within these systems. Recent scholarly sites of inquiry include conservative talk radio stations in rural Utah (and ethnographic work in conservative spaces); the new global network of fact checkers funded by social media platform content moderation contracts; and search engine manipulation of journalists and activists around a controversial 2010s privacy regulation. Prior to MIT, Larsen held a Marie Curie grant at the University of Copenhagen, and was a visiting fellow at the Information Society Project (Yale Law School). She maintains current affiliations as a faculty associate at the Berkman Klein Center (Harvard Law School) and a research associate at the Center for Governance and Human Rights (Cambridge University).
Pascal Le Boeuf joins the Music and Theater Arts Section as an assistant professor. Described as “sleek, new,” “hyper-fluent,” and “a composer that rocks” by The New York Times, he is a Grammy Award-winning composer, jazz pianist, and producer whose works range from improvised music to hybridizing notation-based chamber music with production-based technology. Recent projects include collaborations with Akropolis Reed Quintet, Christian Euman, Jamie Lidell, Alarm Will Sound, Ji Hye Jung, Tasha Warren, Dave Eggar, Barbora Kolarova and Arx Duo, JACK Quartet, Friction Quartet, Hub New Music, Todd Reynolds, Sara Caswell, Jessica Meyer, Nick Photinos, Ian Chang, Dayna Stephens, Linda May Han Oh, Justin Brown, and Le Boeuf Brothers. He received a 2025 Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Composition, a 2024 Barlow Commission, a 2023 Guggenheim Fellowship, and a 2020 Copland House Residency Award. Le Boeuf is a Harold W. Dodds Honorific Fellow and PhD candidate in music composition at Princeton University.
Becca Lewis is an assistant professor in the Comparative Media Studies/Writing program. An interdisciplinary scholar who examines the rise of right-wing politics in Silicon Valley and online, she holds a PhD in communication theory and research from Stanford University and an MS in social science from the University of Oxford. Her work has been published in academic journals including New Media and Society, Social Media and Society, and American Behavioral Scientist, and in news outlets such as The Guardian and Business Insider. She previously worked as a researcher at the Data and Society Research Institute, where she published the organization’s flagship reports on media manipulation, disinformation, and right-wing digital media. In 2022, she served as an expert witness in the defamation lawsuit brought against Alex Jones by the parents of a Sandy Hook shooting victim.
Ben Lindquist is an assistant professor in the History Section, with a shared appointment in the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. His work observes the historical ways that computing has circulated with ideas of religion, emotion, and divergent thinking. “The Feeling Machine,” his first book, under contract with the University of Chicago Press, follows the history of synthetic speech to ask how emotion became a subject of computer science. Before coming to MIT, he was a postdoc in the Science in Human Culture Program at Northwestern University and earned his PhD in history from Princeton University.
Bar Luzon joins the Department of Linguistics and Philosophy as an assistant professor. Luzon completed her BA in philosophy in 2017 at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and her PhD in philosophy in 2024 at New York University. Before coming to MIT, she was a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Philosophy Department at Rutgers University. She works in the philosophy of mind and language, metaphysics, and epistemology. Her research focuses on the nature of representation and the structure of reality. In the course of pursuing these issues, she writes about mental content, metaphysical determination, the vehicles of mental representation, and the connection between truth and different epistemic notions.
Mark Rau is an assistant professor in the Music and Theater Arts Section, with a shared appointment in the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. He is involved in developing graduate programming focused on music technology. He is interested in the fields of musical acoustics, vibration and acoustic measurement, audio signal processing, and physical modeling synthesis, among other areas. As a lifelong musician, his research focuses on musical instruments and creative audio effects. Before joining MIT, he was a postdoc at McGill University and a lecturer at Stanford University. He completed his PhD at Stanford’s Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics. He also holds an MA in music, science, and technology from Stanford, as well as a BS in physics and BMus in jazz from McGill University.
Viola Schmitt is an associate professor in the Department of Linguistics and Philosophy. She is a linguist with a special interest in semantics. Much of her work focuses on trying to understand general constraints on human language meaning; that is, the principles regulating which meanings can be expressed by human languages and how languages can package meaning. Variants of this question were also central to grants she received from the Austrian and German research foundations. She earned her PhD in linguistics from the University of Vienna and worked as a postdoc and/or lecturer at the Universities of Vienna, Graz, Göttingen, and at the University of California at Los Angeles. Her most recent position was as a junior professor at the Humboldt University Berlin.
Angela Saini joins the Comparative Media Studies/Writing program as an assistant professor. A science journalist and author, she presents television and radio documentaries for the BBC and her writing has appeared in National Geographic, Wired, Science, and Foreign Policy. She has published four books, which have together been translated into 18 languages. Her bestselling 2019 book, “Superior: The Return of Race Science,” was a finalist for the LA Times Book Prize, and her latest, “The Patriarchs: The Origins of Inequality,” was a finalist for the Orwell Prize for Political Writing. She has an MEng from the University of Oxford, and was made an honorary fellow of her alma mater, Keble College, in 2023.
Paris Smaragdis SM ’97, PhD ’01 joins the Music and Theater Arts Section as a professor with a shared appointment in the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. He holds a BMus (cum laude ’95) from Berklee College of Music. His research lies at the intersection of signal processing and machine learning, especially as it relates to sound and music. He has been a research scientist at Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs, a senior research scientist at Adobe Research, and an Amazon Scholar with Amazon’s AWS. He spent 15 years as a professor at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign in the Computer Science Department, where he spearheaded the design of the CS+Music program, and served as an associate director of the School of Computer and Data Science.