Thoughts on an academic year passing

Well….it's about a month till commencement. I can tell without looking
at the calendar, because when one walks around campus, the students are
creating “beaches” out of the lawns between the dorms, music blares
forth–except of course when it doesn't, everyone has white ear plugs
dangling, and my colleagues and I are engaged in a frenzy of end-of-the
semester rituals: preparing grades, grant applications and finalizing
hires for the next academic year.

This has been a very satisfying first year of my second term as
Institute director. We've continued our growth and for the first time in
my tenure, I feel as if there are very significant scientific
discoveries right around the corner (both in time and in space). Partly
this has come about from building a real critical mass of scientists
who, while in disparate fields, are willing to collaborate (which
involves a lot of listening and dropping of jargon). From those
trans-disciplinary conversations and subsequent collaborations comes the
low-hanging fruit–and hence truly significant discoveries.

It is impossible of course to predict the details of what progress lies
ahead–the trajectory of science is inscrutable. But having spent a
life-time among scientists who think about “mind”, my intuition is that
Krasnow will soon be associated with paradigm change. I base this on my
interactions with the faculty and trainees, reading the many grant
proposals and manuscripts (in progress) and the general buzz that seems
to permeate this place.

Jim