From the Magazine Archives - News Center /newscenter/category/from-the-magazine/ 做厙勛圖 Wed, 03 Jun 2026 16:01:04 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 While you were sleeping: 做厙勛圖 reshapes the science of sleep /newscenter/review-spring-2026-science-of-sleep-glymphatic-system-702952/ Sun, 24 May 2026 20:31:14 +0000 /newscenter/?p=702952 The 做厙勛圖s researchers and clinicians are helping us understand the science of sleepincluding how it might be one of the most consequential forces in human health.

The scientific establishment wasnt ready.

It was the early 2010s, and knew she was on the cusp of answering one of the most fundamental questions in biology: Why do we sleep?

The neuroscientist and codirector of s had discovered what she and her husband and codirector would dub the , a biological dishwasher that scrubs the brain of waste during sleep. It was a finding so important that Science magazine would list it among its 10 breakthroughs of the year in 2013.

You wouldnt have guessed its importance if youd attended her prepublication talks at sleep conferences and meetings. She enthused to her colleagues about the idea of brain clearance, but they regarded her with open skepticism. They were like, What is she talking about? Nedergaard recalls. People looked at me like I was crazy.

Yet the science was clear. Using sophisticated microscopy techniques to peer inside the brain, her work revealed a cellular cleaning cycle that flushes out toxic proteins primarily during sleep.

Stylized illustration of a head opened like a bowl, with fluid swirling inside and yellow arrows indicating circular flow.
RINSE, REPEAT: The glymphatic system operates as the brains built-in dishwasher, flushing out toxic waste during sleep. (Illustration by Bryce Wymer)

A decade and a half after those inauspicious meetings, Nedergaards discovery has become an engine for research worldwide, generating nearly 2,000 scientific papers. About half of them, she notes with pride, are clinical papers that address the glymphatic systems role in diseases and conditions ranging from Alzheimers and Parkinsons to strokes and migraines.

On this early March afternoon, Nedergaard, who last year became 做厙勛圖s 11th fellow of the National Academy of Inventors, is busy preparing for the . The event, built on her foundational research, has attracted 250 registrants and a 50-person waiting list. Nedergaard is the keynote speaker.

Nedergaards discovery is perhaps the most dramatic chapter in a story about sleep that has been building for a generation at 做厙勛圖. But it is far from the only one. In labs, clinics, classrooms, and beyond, the University has built a formidable concentration of expertise in sleep.

And it is a story that is growing ever more relevant at a moment when people have moved from bragging about how little sleep they need to giving sleep its proper due as one of the essential pillars of health.

The whys of zzzzs

Scientists had long wondered how the brain, which gobbles up about 20 percent of our bodys energy, maintained itself. In the rest of the body, the lymphatic system works alongside the bloodstream to clear away waste. But the blood-brain barrier blocks that system entirely, leaving the brain without an obvious mechanism for cleaning itself.

One long-held theory was that the brain had its own version of a lymphatic system that used cerebrospinal fluid. But the methods scientists had typically used to understand the processstudying brain sections of dead animalshad left plenty of unanswered questions.

 

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Americas greatest hits: The soundtrack of a nation at 250 /newscenter/review-spring-2026-american-music-history-250-years-703152/ Sun, 24 May 2026 19:40:04 +0000 /newscenter/?p=703152 做厙勛圖 experts guide you through 250 years of American music, from Indigenous song and spirituals to jazz, rock, hip-hop, and Bad Bunnys Super Bowl LX performance. ]]> Ask the archivist: Whats the story behind this stamped leather artifact? /newscenter/review-spring-2026-ask-the-archivist-collectible-cigarette-cards-702282/ Sun, 24 May 2026 18:51:16 +0000 /newscenter/?p=702282 A question for Melissa Mead, the John M. and Barbara Keil University Archivist and Rochester Collections Librarian.

Knowing my love for the 做厙勛圖, a family member recently surprised me with a unique gift for the holidaysa small leather rectangle stamped with the pre-1928 Rochester seal. They found it on eBay a while back but didnt have much information regarding its history. Do you know its origins and what it might have been used for?
Jason Buitrago 07, 14W (MS)


Leather rectangle stamped with  the University of Rochester's pre-1928 seal.
STAMPED IN TIME: This leather rectangle bearing the Universitys pre-1928 seal was originally tucked inside a cigarette pack around 1910 as part of a collectible series. (做厙勛圖 photo / J. Adam Fenster)

Your gift was originally tucked inside a pack of cigarettes, issued circa 1910. Though made of leather, it belongs to a long history of cigarette, or trading, cards.

As Maurice Rickards writes in hisEncyclopedia of Ephemera, Cigarette cards were among the first items of ephemera to be produced specifically for collecting. Originating in America as cardboard stiffeners for the paper packs in which cigarettes were then sold, it was shortly realized that the . . . blank cards might serve some promotional purpose.

What better way to convince consumers to keep buying than to distribute cards in limited-run series on topics of interest to people of all ages? Beginning in the late 1870s, cigarette companies issued cards with themes ranging from historical figures and literary characters to flags, flowers, and, of course, athletes.

American colleges and universities entered the mix around 1910. Appearing alongside Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and many others,做厙勛圖made it intonearly everyset. By then, protecting package contents had becomelargely secondaryto marketing, and companies began producing sets in other materials such as leather, silk, and felt.

Leather rectangles and triangular pennants appeared invarious colors, either blind-stamped like yours or with color accents. Silks came in two formats: small woven strips in solid colors featuring school names and seals, and more fragile printed four-by-five-inch silk panels tucked into cigar boxes.One such design included a basketball and net, the first verse of The Genesee, the school yell, and the pre-1928 seal. Paper cards came in two sizes and depicted an energetic scene of students playing ice hockeyorganized as a varsity sport in the fall of 1906.

There is no evidence of any objection to being included in these promotions, but the Archives holds no documents suggesting University administrators were consulted, either. And tobaccowasntthe only vehicle: Weber Bakery in Irvington, New Jersey, also distributed cards,perhaps licensingthe image from a tobacco company. Text on the back promised a different card packed with each loaf of bread every day for two months, and posed the question: Which college is your favorite?

Fair warning, though:Acquiring做厙勛圖ephemera can be habit-forming. The Archives holdings grew significantly recently, thanks to a gift from Mark Zaid 89 from his extensive collection. Look for the first installmenthis postcards and tobacco ephemeraon the soon.


This story appears in the spring 2026 issue of Rochester Review, the magazine of the 做厙勛圖.

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Holding court: 125 years of Yellowjacket mens basketball /newscenter/review-spring-2026-125-years-yellowjacket-mens-basketball-704062/ Sun, 24 May 2026 18:45:08 +0000 /newscenter/?p=704062 This February marked the 125th season of the 做厙勛圖s program. Across more than 2,500 games and 1,400 wins, generations of student-athletes have built one of the Universitys most successful programsand made lasting memories along the way. Here are some of the defining moments.

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The art of whats next /newscenter/review-spring-2026-what-is-contemporary-art-timothy-peterson-703642/ Sun, 24 May 2026 18:36:27 +0000 /newscenter/?p=703642 At the Memorial Art Gallery, Timothy Peterson is building a collection that reflects todays complexity while helping shape the canon that endures.

Timothy Peterson spends much of his time in places most people never see: under freeway overpasses, inside warehouse studios, in half-finished spaces where artists are still working out ideas and responding in real time to the zeitgeist. He is looking for what isnt settled yet, for concepts still taking shape.

For the 做厙勛圖s (MAG), those instincts carry remarkable weight. As the inaugural , Peterson isnt just selecting artworks to acquire; hes helping shape how the future will understand the presentbuilding a collection that reflects todays bracing complexity while engaging with MAGs 5,000 years of holdings.

Upstairs, one finds Egyptian mummies, a Baroque organ, and Monets soft washes of color. Descend into the Modern and Contemporary Art Gallery, though, and the aesthetic shift hits immediately. I give a great deal of attention to sightlines, Peterson says. Dominating one wall is Erin Shirreffs Paper Sculpture, a large-scale shadow box composed of magnified scans from vintage photography. From afar, its dots and rosettes coalesce into what appears to be plaster, stone, wood, and metal; up close, the illusion dissolves into curving planes and fragments of printed matter.

When a museum as important as MAG selects what enters its contemporary collection, it is helping determine what artists and artworks enter what we call the canon. Think of how important that is. Sarah Jesse

I love that after the long walk to Paper Sculpture, its shadow box format still provides further depth to consider up close, Peterson says. That layering lets the viewer observe both three-dimensional forms in a culture mediated by still and moving images and aspects of collage, sculpture, and dye-sublimation printingall processes that figure in modern and contemporary art.

Petersons other important sightline, leading from an entrance used by local school groups to Wayne Thiebauds River Pond, shows how an artist famous for cakes and pies renders landscape with similar pastels and precision. Both works speak to Petersons curatorial vision: conversation sparked and sustained through encounters with artists, materials, and ideas still cohering.

It is a vision that extends far beyond Rochester, notes , the Mary W. and Donald R. Clark Director of MAG.

Curating the canon

Contemporary art is different from all the other categories of art in an encyclopedic museum because every artworkbaroque, impressionist, modernistwas once contemporary, Jesse says. When a museum as important as MAG selects what enters its contemporary collection, it is helping determine what artists and artworks enter what we call the canon. Think of how important that is.

Those high stakes animated the search that brought Peterson to Rochester in September 2024 as the museums first contemporary art curator, a position endowed by local gallerist Deborah Ronnen in honor of her parents. Timothys position isnt just important to MAG, or to the arts in Rochester, Jesse says. It will have an impact on the art world.

WHAT A BEAUTIFUL WORLD: Peterson is committed to acquiring more works by women, artists of color, and LGBTQ+ artistsensuring, as he puts it, that a wider world exists within the gallerys walls. (做厙勛圖 photo / J. Adam Fenster)

Petersonwho grew up in Minnesota and earned a bachelors in art history at St. Olaf College followed by a masters in art history at Williams Collegehas curated more than 150 exhibitions and worked with artists ranging from emerging voices to internationally recognized figures. Over nearly four decades, he has held leadership roles at the Center for Maine Contemporary Art, the SCAD Museum of Art in Savannah, and Franklin Art Works in Minneapolis.

Yet what distinguishes Peterson is not only experienceit is orientation. Over an orange-flavored Celsius in the museums pavilion, he speaks in a rhythm that mirrors his approach: connective, passionate, attentive. Even when discussing acquisitions or installations, he returns to the artists and their processes. Youre not just studying objects, he says. Youre trying to understand how something comes into being, and why it matters.

That inquiry often begins in the studiomany of which are in locations Peterson likens to no mans landor at gallery openings, where he tracks emerging directions in contemporary practice. It requires a particular kind of judgment: the ability to recognize significance before it is widely acknowledged. On a trip to New York City, for example, he was eager to view the work of Carmen de Monteflores, the mother of artist Andrea Fraser, who has exhibited works in the Whitney Biennial. Though de Monteflores never received widespread recognition, she exemplifies the often-hidden talent Peterson seeks out.

Hes able to separate the signal from the noise, Jesse says, which is arguably one of the most important skills a curator of contemporary art can have.

Dialogue on display

Hugo McCloud's "Blue Zone" depicts a figure carrying stacked cardboard boxes through a misty urban street scene, constructed from plastic bags.
OUT OF THE BLUE: Underscoring the evolving nature of materials used in contemporary art, Hugo McClouds Blue Zone is constructed from hand-cut and ironed single-use plastic bags. (做厙勛圖 photo / J. Adam Fenster)

The sensibility Jesse describes is immediately visible in Petersons reimagining of MAGs contemporary gallery. One of his first acts upon arriving was to remove 13 interior walls, opening the space to natural light and continuous sightlines. Sculpture, photography, and painting now coexist in an environment that encourages visual and conceptual connections.

Were leaning into openness, Peterson says. The goal is to create an environment where works can speak to each other, and to visitors, without being confined by strict categories.

Within that environment, materials become a starting point for conversation. Hugo McClouds Blue Zone, constructed from hand-cut and ironed single-use plastic bags, transforms a ubiquitous byproduct of global commerce into a monumental depiction of physical labor on a street in India. The work underscores both environmental degradation and the invisibility of manual work while posing a practical question for the museum: How will such materials endure?

No material is off-limits now, Peterson says. The question is how it survives. That tension between experimentation and preservation reflects a broader shift in contemporary art, where artists increasingly work with unconventional materials that challenge traditional museum practices.

In Paul Mpagi SepuyasDarkroom Mirror, two partially unclothed men share a camera, their faces obscured. In many ways, photography offers visitors the most immediate opportunity to see themselves reflected in an artwork, Peterson says. In this case, the artist and his friend offer queer visibility, and animate Sepuyas notion of the artists studio as a social and cultural space for interaction and artmaking. MAGs collection of more than 12,000 objects includes over 250 works in photography, the majority dating from 1950 and later.

Expanding the frame

My goal is to expand the conversation, Peterson says. To create new ways of thinking, new points of entry. That means, in part, acquiring more works by women, artists of color, and LGBTQ+ artistsensuring, as he puts it, that a wider world exists within the gallerys walls.

In Caroline Kents Timely movements match hidden motivations, abstract shapes and patterns glide across layered black backgrounds. Using cut-paper techniques, Kent treats abstraction as a form of visual language that resists fixed meaning while inviting viewers into the interpretive process. To extend Kents sensibility beyond the canvas, Peterson will work with her to create a large-scale wall drawing in MAGs pavilion that he hopes will generate an immersive, chromatic energy.

Caroline Kent's "Timely movements match hidden motivations" features abstract geometric shapes and patterns in green, blue, and coral on a black ground.
OFF THE WALL: Caroline Kent, whose Timely movements match hidden motivations is part of the MAGs permanent collection, will work with Peterson to design a large-scale wall drawing for the museums pavilion. (做厙勛圖 photo / J. Adam Fenster)

Hanging across from Kents piece and next to McClouds Blue Zone, Euphemism (Knot Stories) gives sculptural form to tension and resilience. The black-glazed ceramic box by Paul S. Briggs is densely threaded with coiled, knotted tubes that push against and pierce its structure. Drawing on Black poetry and the realities of mass incarceration, the work transforms traditional ceramic techniques into a meditation on constraint and endurancehistorical form pressed into urgent contemporary service.

A pink marble statue on a cedar plinth, Sanford Biggerss The Cantor similarly layers histories and visual traditions. By combining a female ancestor mask from the African Chokwe people with a classical Greek maiden, Biggers connects three of MAGs collection areasclassical sculpture, African art, and contemporary artwhile prompting new conversations about identity, materiality, and cultural inheritance.

Louis Fratinos The young father, meanwhile, offers an exceptionally rare image of fatherhood in the museums collection, as well as a rare male nude sculpturewhich were key points in acquiring it, Peterson says. The bronze figure expands the emotional and representational range of the collection, foregrounding intimacy, vulnerability, and care in ways that feel both timeless and newly visible.

Collecting contemporary art means making decisions before consensus has formed and before an artists place in history is secure. Youre making a judgment about what will last, Peterson says. And history shows us how unpredictable that can beVincent van Gogh only sold one painting in his lifetime.

An anchor for regional culture

Petersons endowed position places him within a longer institutional history shaped by visionary women.

Uniquely among American museums, strong women have been instrumental at every point in MAGs history, Jesse says. Emily Sibley Watson founded the institution; Hannah Durand Gould created the first acquisition fund; the Herdle sisters built MAG into a nationally important encyclopedic museum. And now Deborah Ronnen has given us our largest gift and established an endowment that will make us a significant player in contemporary art.

Our challenge is to show up not only for artists who have already proven themselves, but for those whose work will resonate when we look back. Timothy Peterson

That foundation frees Peterson to do the work he considers essential: learning about the community, supporting other creative people, and nurturing vital relationships. Since his arrival, he has connected with institutions such as the George Eastman Museum and Visual Studies Workshop, a nonprofit organization dedicated to arts education. And he is conducting studio visits throughout the region, from Buffalo to the Finger Lakes, to build coalitions of regional artists.

Because the endowment exists in perpetuity, so does the mandate. Our challenge is to show up not only for artists who have already proven themselves, Peterson says, but for those whose work will resonate when we look back.

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When the going gets tough: What you need to know about resilience /newscenter/review-spring-2026-resilience-science-trauma-research-702792/ Sun, 24 May 2026 18:28:37 +0000 /newscenter/?p=702792 A new trandisciplinary research center brings together faculty dedicated to studying resilience science.

Stress is the bodys natural reaction to a challenge. While our psychological, behavioral, and biological responses to stress can be beneficial, chronic stress can have serious negative health implications. At the new Resilience Research Center, faculty from across the 做厙勛圖 investigate why some people bounce back from stress, trauma, and adversity and others dontand what can be done about it.

 

Ink and watercolor illustrated portrait of Elaine Hill, smiling, wearing glasses and hoop earrings.
Elaine Hill (Illustration by Sam Kerr)

, Deans Professor, , and Professor, Departments of and :

My research focuses on early-life exposures to neighborhood and community sources of stress and how those exposures affect health throughout the life course.

In looking at how the pandemic exacerbated the overdose crisis, we found that pre-pandemic community vulnerability and local economic conditions, as measured by high unemployment, explained most of the large increases in overdose mortality through 2022. We also found that access to substance-use treatment during pregnancy improved outcomes for mothers and infants, including reducing preterm birth and severe maternal morbidity. In terms of environmental exposures during pregnancy, our team has found adverse infant and maternal outcomes with exposures to traffic, shale gas development, low-quality public drinking water, hazardous waste management, construction projects, and extreme heat.

has led me to say environmental policy and economic policy are health policy. Policies that target improving community contexts and building community resilience are likely to have meaningful returns on investment, leading to improved health and well-being over the long term.

 

Ink and watercolor illustrated portrait of Jennie Noll, smiling, with curly hair and a beaded necklace.
Jennie Noll (Illustration by Sam Kerr)

, Professor, , and Executive Director, :

There are remarkable stories of resilience, of people who have come from amazingly difficult systems, families, experiences. For three decades I have studied how early adversity and trauma impact human development at various levels of functioning. The bulk of has focused on child sexual abuse, and my work has contributed to foundational knowledge that explains the vast mental and physical health disparities exhibited by survivors.

These disparities include difficulties in social relationships with peers, parents, romantic partners, and even with ones own children. Marked mental health difficulties, including depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and an overactive stress-response system can disrupt key stress-regulated physiological systems associated with health and longevity. These disruptions affect our ability to fight off disease and can set the stage for metabolic and behavioral problems.

I pay particular attention to variables, conditions, and contexts that help explain why some survivors emerge relatively unscathed in comparison to their peers, as these are clues to early intervention and prevention.

 

Ink and watercolor illustrated portrait of Kathi Heffner, smiling, with straight dark hair.
Kathi Heffner (Illustration by Sam Kerr)

, Professor, and Departments of and , and Associate Chief of Research, :

Stress is experienced across the lifespan. What changes are the challenges or stressors we face. Children absolutely feel stress, whether from school pressures, family circumstances, or social dynamics. Adolescents often experience stress around identity and belonging, while adults may juggle work and caregiving or financial strain. For older adults, stress combined with aging can increase the risk for poor health in later life.

My current focus is on finding ways to promote well-being and immune health in caregivers of a family member with dementia, as well as individuals at risk for dementia. We found that improving attention and the speed at which stressed caregivers processed informationusing computerized cognitive trainingalso improved their memory performance under laboratory stress. Importantly, cognitive training also lessened their negative emotional responses to memory problems and challenging behaviors of their family member with dementia, suggesting that these brain games can build caregivers cognitive and emotional resilience.

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The making of a dream engineer /newscenter/review-spring-2026-michelle-carr-how-to-lucid-dream-engineering-702212/ Sun, 24 May 2026 18:14:49 +0000 /newscenter/?p=702212 Michelle Carr 10, 22 (Flw) had her first lucid dream as an undergraduate at the University of Rochester. Shes been unraveling the science of the sleeping mind ever since.

Michelle Carr 10, 22 (Flw) had experienced her share of vividoften terrifyingdreams throughout childhood and into early adulthood. What happened at the end of a mid-morning nap during her sophomore year at the 做厙勛圖 was different. No one was chasing her. Nothing was wrong. She was just there.

I was in my dorm room in Rochester, and I sat up in bed, Carr recalls over Zoom from her office at the . I realized I was dreaming, and I looked down and could see my sleeping body lying in bed. I stood up and walked over to the wall and to the desk. I was just looking at the dream because I was so shocked at how my mind was doing this. I thought, It looks so real. It was like that scene in Inception where [Saito] looks at the carpet very closely. That was the whole dream. I just looked at the wall and the desk, and I was like, This is possible.

What Carr was experiencing had a namelucid dreaming, the state in which a person becomes aware, mid-dream, that they are dreamingthough she didnt know it yet. Or that deciphering experiences like the one shed just had would become her lifes work.

Today, Carr is one of a small global cohort of researchers who call themselves dream engineersscientists who apply techniques and technologies to influence, record, and manipulate the content of dreams to benefit memory, creativity, or well-being. She helped coin the term, organized the first Dream Engineering Workshop, and late last year released the first book to bring dream engineering to a mainstream audience. The field was galvanized by that first lucid dream but its roots, in fact, run much deeper.

Eyes wide shut

Carr grew up in Corning, New York, a small city about 100 miles south of Rochester, with two brothers and parents who highly valued educationher mother taught special education in the local school district and her father rose to vice president at Corning Community College. At around age three, she was diagnosed with moderate hearing lossa difficulty hearing higher frequencies, and consonants in particular, that requires her to wear hearing aids in order to understand speechand the family began making regular trips to Rochester, a hub for audiology care and home to .

I was just looking at the dream because I was so shocked at how my mind was doing this. I thought, It looks so real.漍

Equipped with what she describes as a very, very vivid imagination, Carr was drawn to both science and the arts. She was captivated by biology and harbored ambitions of becoming a writer. Dreams were a defining presence in her childhood, toosome pleasant, others so troubling that she would lie awake for hours to avoid sleep. Her first science project, predictably enough, tackled the subject head-on.

It was the first time the teacher was like, You have to find your sources in the library and give a poster presentation to the class. So I guess I was always interested in dreams because that was the topic that I chose, Carr recalls, laughing. I just remember every single person in the class asked me a question afterward. Mostly, it was the typical, I have this dream; what does it mean? Which is still what everybody does when they find out what I do.

Carr was 15 when she experienced the first of what would become frequent episodes of sleep paralysiswhen the natural muscle paralysis that occurs during REM sleep seeps into a dream. A shotgun fires my mind into a sudden awakening, but my body does not jolt from the recoil, she described one such episode for an undergraduate writing assignment. What was that? Its pitch black but for a thin line of foggy light coming through the forced squint of my eyelids. I cant move. Why cant I move?! I must be tied down. I must be paralyzed, or dead. My eyes . . . wont open!

Michelle Carr presenting on stage at a New Scientist event, with a slide reading "Exploring Dreams & Consciousness" behind her.
WALKING THE TALK: As one of the world’s leading dream engineers, Carr is often called on to present at conferences for academic, clinical, and mainstream audiences alike. (Courtesy of Michelle Carr)

More frightening than nightmares, Carrs sleep paralysis often involved a demon-like creature pressing so hard on her chest that it felt like it was squeezing the life right out of her. When she shared her experiences with a few friends, no one seemed to understand or recognize what was happening. (Even her professor would later tell her it sounded too fictional for a nonfiction writing assignment.) It was only when she went to [the early search engine] Ask Jeeves that she learned the term sleep paralysisand that she was far from alone in suffering it. The bad news was that a select few unlucky people go on to experience sleep paralysis regularly throughout their lives, and there was no known cure or treatment, she wrote. I was to become one of those people.

Alternate realities

When Carr arrived at 做厙勛圖 as a first-year student in the fall of 2006, she planned to major in biology. But an Intro to Cognition class prompted her to switch immediately to brain and cognitive sciences. Theres the where they show you what the attentional blink is. Youre watching people play with a ball and then a gorilla walks through the sceneyou dont even notice it because youre paying attention to the ball, she says. I was just fascinated to learn that everyones mind is doing this. Everything seems so concrete and so stable and solid, but its really illusorywere fabricating what we perceive in some way. And I think that ties into dreaming quite a bit.

Carr got her first taste of research as a sophomore intern in the under psychiatry professor . She recalls participating in one overnight studyjust for funbut mostly cleaning data, reviewing scientific literature, and performing other entry-level tasks as needed. She was one of these very motivated students who, I think, knew from early on that she was going to graduate school, says Pigeon. She was the kind of person who would always ask, Is there anything else I can do?

Carr worked in three other labs as an undergraduate, studying everything from visual cognition to video games and infant-mother attachment, while satisfying her love of the arts through clusters in photography, creative writing, tai chi, and drum circles. I think a huge strength of going to school there was just the amount of opportunities available, she says. I also really liked that side of U of R, how much the arts and creativity and the humanities were valued in concert with science and psychology. That, to me, is dream scienceits something thats ephemeral and hard to describe, but were also trying to study it very scientifically through the brain and understand whats happening. I really appreciate being able to straddle those two worlds.

Flying is the first trick everyone learns, and once you do, thats your transport mode of choiceforever.

Over the years, Carr also became something of an expert in lucid dreaming. After that first experience, she read everything on the topic she could find. She learned about ancient religions that used the practice to harness altered states of consciousness or prepare for death. She even conducted her own experiments, learning how to move around inside her dreams (Flying is the first trick everyone learns, and once you do, thats your transport mode of choiceforever) or practice skills, like tai chi, that she was studying in her waking life. Perhaps most significantly, she discovered she could use lucid dreaming to confront, and even transform, her most distressing nightmares and fears.

But finding a graduate program where she could study dreamsnot just sleep, not just neuroscience, but dreamsturned out to be harder than she expected. Unwilling to compromise, she cold emailed a dozen researchers she found through the (IASD). Is there anywhere I can actually study dreams? Several people told her no, but four or five pointed her to the same place: the , run by a researcher named . She appliedvery late, as it turned outand was accepted into the graduate program.

Its funny. I found the email I wrote to [Nielsen] before I even started, with a long list of the topics I was interested in at the time. I could have written it today, Carr says. Im interested in how dreaming is related to mental health and well-beinghow we can interact with our dreams, gain insight from them, and try to make them more positive. But also the more functional mechanisms of sleep: How is dreaming related to memory consolidation during sleep? How is it related to whats happening in the body?

Into the lab

Carr spent five years in Montreal, impressing Nielsen with her calm demeanor and inquisitive mind. Unlike me, she was quite confident in lucid dreaming being accepted by other, non-dream-oriented researchers as a legitimate area of science, he says. Coming from a background heavily steeped in behaviorism, I never had this kind of confidence. At the same time, I came to appreciate that Michelle had very good ideas about the possible functions of dreams and nightmares.

Some of those ideas were published in a joint paper with Nielsen on sensory processing sensitivity and nightmare sufferers. Others reached a different audience entirely through a Carr maintained for several years, translating dream science research for general readersan early sign that her interests extended beyond thelab.

The next stop after Montreal was Swansea, Wales, where Carr spent three years as a postdoctoral researcher in the sleep lab of British research psychologist . It was there that she began running her first polysomnography (sleep study) experiments using light and sound cues to induce lucid dreams. Getting people to give eye signals in response to our cues while they were sleeping was really exciting, she says. That was fun. Blagrove also introduced her to dreamworkthe practice of sharing dreams for both personal insight and empathywhich Carr continues to study for its potential to enhance social connection.

A researcher attaches colorful electrode wires to a study participant's face and head in a sleep research lab.
STUDY TIME: While pursuing her PhD at the Dream and Nightmare Laboratory at the University of Montreal, Carr both conducted and participated in sleep studies. (Courtesy of Michelle Carr)

It was while at Swansea that Carrs ambitions for dream engineering as a fieldnot just a set of techniques scattered across different labscrystallized into something concrete. In January 2019, she organized and led the first at the MIT Media Lab, bringing together more than 50 scientists to brainstorm new technologies for studying, recording, and influencing dreams.

Later that fall, Carr returned to 做厙勛圖and to Pigeons labthis time as a postdoctoral associate supported by the . The fellowship enabled her to study sleep in Deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals, drawing on her own experience with hearing loss and that of Rochesters large Deaf community. Around the same time, Carr was rising through the ranks of the IASDfirst as vice president, then as president beginning in 2021.

She is, at first blush, not someone you would think of as especially outgoingand yet she has a very vast and nice network of folks that shes built over time, Pigeon says. Some people who may have been working relatively independently in their labs are now a community, talking about [dream engineering] and developing it as a subfield. And it was wild that before she was even a faculty member, she became president of an international organization. Its unheard of.

Living the dream

Carr now directs the Dream Engineering Labat the University of Montreals , where she oversees six to eight graduate students and postdoctoral researchers working across several concurrent studies. The projects reflect Carrs wide-ranging interests, from lucid dreaming and the memory sources of dreams to a unique partnership with a film studies team exploring targeted dream incubationa technique in which subjects are shown a movie just prior to sleep, then hear clips of its soundtrack at different sleep stages.

Michelle Carr stands with one hand in her pocket, smiling, photographed in a softly lit interior space.
LAB LIFE: Carr is photographed at the Dream Engineering Lab, or DxE Lab, which she established at the University of Montreals Center for Advanced Research in Sleep Medicine. (做厙勛圖 photo / Alex Tran)

But what excites her mostand what she expounds on in her new book, is collaborating with clinicians to help those suffering from serious conditions such as addiction and chronic pain. I see a lot of other clinical researchers becoming interested in dreams and nightmares and how prevalent they are in their patients, and starting to question whether theres an avenue for treatment there thats so far been neglected, she says. I feel like an energy is starting to spread to other domains. Other research fields are saying, OK, theres something we could do with this.漍

Looking ahead, Carr sees sleepand the dreams that animate itbecoming as vital to understanding our physical and mental health as anything that happens during our waking lives. I think were really beginning to uncover this, she says. There are specific patterns in how dreaming changes in different health conditions. Its something we can use as information, but also something we can treat. That would change the quality of our sleep, but also the quality of our lives.

Nearly two decades since she first awoke inside a dream, Carr has reached a point where she can choose whether to enter that dark basement corner of our unconscious mind or simply bask in the sensation of becoming lucid. Most nights she sleeps nine hours and wakes without an alarm. I usually spend some time remembering my dreams, but I dont often write them down unless theyre really striking. I just kind of rehearse them a little bit, she says. If I had a bad dream, Ill think about it and maybe reframe it. But thats really it.

Then she gets up and looks around. She might glance back at the bed. Theres nothingand no onethere.

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Faculty works: Spring 2026 /newscenter/review-spring-2026-faculty-works-books-recordings-702022/ Sun, 24 May 2026 18:03:47 +0000 /newscenter/?p=702022 From a study of multinational corporations to an opera confronting missing and murdered Indigenous women, six new works showcase the breadth of inquiry across 做厙勛圖s faculty.

Political science professor examines how American multinational corporations have shapedand been shaped byglobal governance structures, tracing how firms influence regulatory frameworks, economic policy, and transnational cooperation. He argues that corporations are not merely market actors but central participants in constructing and sustaining international order. (Cambridge University Press)


Eastman historian and musicologist offers a lively cultural history of postwar performers who redefined artistic and personal freedom. Through vivid portraits of musicians, dancers, and experimental artists, he charts how their embrace of self-realization transformed the arts, psychology, education, and wellnessestablishing authenticity as an enduring American ideal. (University of California Press)


Assistant Professor of Russian documents the unlikely ascent of Soviet rock cinema, a genre born from Cold War tensions and underground music scenes. Safariants shows how the films reflected perestroika-era upheaval and continue to influence Russian cultural identity, even as shifting political forces reshape their meaning and legacy. (University of Wisconsin Press)


Professor of Conducting and Ensembles leads the Munich Philharmonic in a sweeping performance of Philip Glasss 梆喧硃勳梯繳, a monumental choral-orchestral work inspired by a vast hydroelectric dam. Lubmans interpretation highlights both the meditative pull and dramatic scale of Glasss vision, capturing the works immersive sonic landscape. (M羹nchner Philharmoniker)


The , under , delivers a vibrant program celebrating the genre-crossing compositions of Jeff Tyzik 73E, 77E (MM). Blending classical precision with jazz vitality, the album showcases the ensembles virtuosity and stylistic range. Performances by high-profile alumni artists enhance the technical brilliance and joyful energy that define Tyziks musicand his abiding connection to Eastman.
(Summit Records)


Professor of Opera 92E (MM) conducts this stirring contemporary opera confronting the crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls. With music by Brian Current and a libretto by Marie Clements, the recording follows a young woman transformed by a spiritual encounter. Fusing contemporary classical music with Indigenous language and traditions, this work functions as both elegy and call to action, demanding these lives not be forgotten. (Bright Shiny Things)


This story appears in the spring 2026 issue of Rochester Review, the magazine of the 做厙勛圖.

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Office hours with Pablo Sierra Silva /newscenter/review-spring-2026-office-hours-pablo-sierra-silva-702162/ Sun, 24 May 2026 18:02:39 +0000 /newscenter/?p=702162 The historian and creator of the Black Mexico seminar and World History Through Soccer on hidden connections, the power of primary sources, and sport as a window onto society.

As an undergraduate, I loved studying African historyEthiopia, Senegal, Angolaand literature, film, and history from Latin America. Those two interests felt like separate tracks.

The turning point came in a lecture on Black conquistadores of Mexico. I remember sitting there thinking, This has to be wrong, because I had never heard this history beforeand I spent most of my childhood in Mexico. It completely floored me.

Suddenly it clicked: I could bring my two interests together, asking what it means to study Blackness in Mexico, a place so closely associatedvisually and narrativelywith Indigenous civilizations like the Maya andMexica.

On an exploratory trip to Mexico, I reviewed a box of documents from the 1600s. Right away, I found dozens of references to enslaved Angolans and Congolese. I thought: If this random request yields so much history, what would a true, in-depth study produce?

Pablo Sierra Silva leaning against a bookshelf in his office, smiling, with a soccer jersey and sports memorabilia visible behind him.
SHELF LIFE: Sierra Silvas office is filled with books, some of which he has written himself. (做厙勛圖 photo / J. Adam Fenster)

That led to my first book, (Cambridge University Press, 2018). So much of my archival material never made it into the book, so when Covid hit and the archives closed, I wrote (Hackett Publishing, 2024).

Theres a will from Zacatecas, in northern Mexico, written by a man in the 1700s who owned something like a convenience store. He lists his stock20 yards of ribbon and lace, four pounds of candlesand then itemizes what people pawned to buy things: a coral bracelet, a silver pendant. A student might read that and think, My sister has a pendant like that. Suddenly, 1712 doesnt feel so distant.

Another document that has stayed with me is an investigation into a gay community in Mexico City. I was never taught that queer communities existed in the colonial period. The document is violentthese people are being persecuted by crown officialsbut within it you find lists of homes where they dined, and their nicknames for each other: La Rosada, the pink one, and La Coqueta, the flirt.

Mapping those communities onto the past and then asking what we do with that knowledge has been powerful. A student raised in the 2000s or 2010s will see things in that document that I never would. Thats what keeps me committed to primary sources: Each generation reads them anew.

My current research follows 1,463 people kidnapped in a pirate attack in Veracruz and dispersed to places like colonial Charleston, South Carolina, and Saint-Domingue (present-day Haiti). What did it mean for those people, and for those left behind? What did it mean to land in a foreign port, not speaking the language, and, in some parts of Saint-Domingue, in a setting with very few women?

Ive always been drawn to the footnote on the page that says, We dont know what happened to this person. Im obsessed with those gaps. Why dont we know? What connections are we missing?

Pablo Sierra Silva and his World History Through Soccer students pose in soccer jerseys in front of a projected lecture slide.
SMELLS LIKE TEAM SPIRIT: For one class during every World History Through Soccer course, Sierra Silva invites students to come dressed in their favorite teams jersey. (做厙勛圖 photo / J. Adam Fenster)

For me, sport offers another way into these questions. I try to HIST 154: World History Through Soccer every World Cup cycle. It always strikes me how central sports are to everyday life in Latin America, the United States, and Europeand yet when we open many standard histories, theyre barely mentioned. How can that be, when on a given Sunday in some cities a huge share of the population is either at the stadium or listening on the radio?

In Buenos Aires alone there are 79 stadiums; thats a profound transformation of urban space that we rarely treat as historically significant.

Im especially interested in the history of womens soccer. Archival photos of women playing in uniforms in Chile in the early 1900s raise questions about why those stories disappeared in the 1960s. If I ever move fully into researching the 20th or 21st century, it will likely be through this lens. We dont take sports seriously enough in academia.

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Our man in China /newscenter/review-spring-2026-dan-wang-breakneck-our-man-in-china-701642/ Sun, 24 May 2026 17:51:42 +0000 /newscenter/?p=701642 For seven years, Dan Wangobserved, documented, and analyzed a nation changing at breakneck speed. Nowhesgot world leaders hanging on his every word.

Dan Wang 15 is, by any measure, having a moment. His book,(W.W. Norton, 2025), about Chinas dizzying ascent on the international stage and what the United States can learn from it, has become a must-read among world leaders and policymakers since its publication last year.

Book cover for Breakneck, written by Dan Wang.
BREAKING THROUGH: 兜硃紳眶s Breakneck: Chinas Quest to Engineer the Future became a bestseller and attracted attention from policymakers and world leaders for its analysis of Chinas rise and Americas challenges in building at speed and scale. (做厙勛圖 photo / J. Adam Fenster)

It was spotted on the desk of Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson. Aides to German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and British Prime Minister Keir Starmerreportedly readit on their recent trips to China. It madeThe New York Timesbestseller list, was named one ofThe New Yorkers Best Books of theYear, andwas shortlisted for theFinancial TimesBusiness Book of the Year.. And it landed Wang on some of the most influential泭硃紳餃泭in America.

Yet when Wang (pronounced Wong) joins a video call withRochester Reviewfrom outside the Hoover Institutiona public policy think tank at Stanford, where he is a research fellow in its History Labhe seems amused by the notion that his work has had an impact.

You never really know what happens when you write a book, Wang says. One always hopes that people will pick it up and read it.Imglad some people have.

Wang attributes some of the books success to timing. It came out in a year of headlines about China, from the trade war toDeepSeek. It was also published a few months afterAbundance, another bestseller by journalists Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson. That book has been called a guide for reforming government and overcoming socioeconomic problems in Americaif progressives can stop blocking big dreams andgood ideaswith what the authors call an endless catalog of rules and restraints.

Both primed readers for the idea that Americans are right to be frustrated by the state of their state. The stars aligned, Wang says.

Breakneckexamines why the United States struggles to build housing, high-speed rail, and energy infrastructure at speed and scale while Chinaappears to erecttowering bridges, superhighways and gleaming railways, and sprawling factories overnight. 兜硃紳眶s conclusion: The American elite is made up of mostly lawyers, excelling at obstruction,whereasChina is run by a technocratic class, made up mostly of engineers, that excels at construction.

China, Wang writes, is an engineering state building at breakneck speed, in contrast to the United States lawyerly society, blocking everything it can, good and bad.

Learning from the masters

It may be tempting to view Wang as an overnight success. 詁喝喧泭Breakneckwas seven years in the making, and 兜硃紳眶s ascent to his rarefied perch in the global conversation about power, technology, and economic development was anything but linear.

The foundation for his book is a series of annual letters he wrote to family, friends, and followers that chronicled his observations during the seven years he spent in China after graduating from the University of Rochester, a graduation that almostdidnthappen.

He recalls his years at 做厙勛圖 with gratitude. He enrolled in large part, he says, because the University made going to college possible for him. Born in southwest China, Wang immigrated with his family at age seven to Canada, where he was raised mostly in Ottawa before his parents relocated to the Philadelphia suburbs when he was a teenager. As a Canadian citizen from a family he describes as being not well off, Wang required substantial financial aid to attend college. 做厙勛圖s generosity was the deciding factor.

I was able to graduate from college debt-free, he says. It has been a nice thing.

But he was, by his own admission, an unremarkable student, despite earning accolades. In 2013, he was recognized as theStudent Employee of the Yearfor his work as a news assistant in the Office of Communications.

In nominating him, thenAssociate Vice President of Communications LarryArbeiterwrote that Wang had an uncanny knack for framing stories about the University that drew national media attention. That kind of success is highly sought by experienced professionals,Arbeiterwrote, and is basically unheard of by a student.

Larry Arbeiter and Dan Wang stand side by side and both hold a "Student Employee of the Year" award.
CAMPUS BEGINNINGS: As a 做厙勛圖 student, Wang was named Student Employee of the Year in 2013 for his work as a news assistant in the Office of Communications (now University Marketing and Communications). ThenAssociate Vice President of Communications Larry Arbeiter praised 兜硃紳眶s instinct for shaping stories that resonated beyond campus. (做厙勛圖 photo / Brandon Vick)

When hewasntworking in the office, Wang roamed the stacks in RushRheesor hunkered down in his default study space in the librarys music section. It was a tremendously pleasing experience to walk through so many books and be able to pull out books as onewishes, he says.

He devoured the works of Edith Wharton and Honor矇 de Balzac. In the music section, he browsed scores and once copied a Gustav Mahler symphony by hand,measureby measure. Wang did the same with prose, retyping articles inThe New Yorkeras something of a self-directed monastic apprenticeship aimed at absorbing the language, cadence, and rhythm of masters of their craft.

I think I did that three or four times, just rewrote the entire article by retyping it to see the choices a writer makes, Wang says. And I did the same thing as a music student because I thought seeing the choices a composer makes was important.

Wang majored in philosophy, wrestling with logic and classical texts that helped him hone arguments. But it was an economics professor, Michael Rizzo, who had the biggest impact on him as a student.

Rizzo, he says, organized reading circles of the works of Austrian economist and philosopher Friedrich Hayek that left an impression on Wang and exposed him to great thinkers of the economics blogosphere like Tyler Cowen, who later became an intellectual influence. (Cowens praise for Breakneckas arguably the best book of the year flat out is displayed prominently on itscover.)

Dan was the kind of student who inspired me to want to learnmoremyself, and he had an extreme restlessness about him that resonated then and still does today, Rizzo says.

That restlessness became moreapparentthan ever when, after his junior year, Wang dropped out.

A detour, then a diploma

Wang had landed a job in marketing and communications in Toronto at the cloud-based e-commerce platform Shopify when the company was in its infancy. He was making good money and enjoyed the work. There was a point in my life when I thought I was going to be quite happy to be a dropout, he says.

詁喝喧泭做厙勛圖officials persisted in trying to persuade him to禿eturn and finish his degree. Hesays he told themhe preferred to stay at Shopify. Then they asked, Is there anything you would like to do? Wang recalls. Imbeing a bit cheeky here, but I said, You know, I would like to spend my last semester drinking beer in Germany.

And, again, Im being stylized and cheeky, but they said, We have a program for that! Wang finished his degree in Freiburg im Breisgau through the Institute for the International Education of Students, better known as IES Abroad.

He skipped commencement to take a content marketing job in Silicon Valley at the supply chain logistics company Flexport. There he stood at the corner of global trade and technologyan intersection that would become the backbone of Breakneck.

Rochester mailed me my diploma, Wang says. But Im glad I had the patience to finish my degree.

In 2017, Wang moved to China. He joined an economic research firm as a technology analyst, writing about semiconductors and clean-tech manufacturing primarily for an audience of hedge fund clients around the world.

I felt like I moved to China on the cusp of a technological flowering. I knew people were underestimating China, but living there was kind of like being on a very different branch of the technological tree that Silicon Valley wasnt going down.

The country was, in many ways, familiar terrain. He had visited relatives there growing up and spoke fluent Mandarin thanks to his mother, a former television news anchor, who saw to that.

But living there as an adult, Wangobserveddistinct differences between the China he knew as a child and his homes in Canada and the United States. While Silicon Valley cast itself as the unquestioned center of technological innovation, he saw in China a country that was positioning itself to compete, often ferociously. There was a sense of optimism.

The country was churning out new cars, including varieties of electric vehicles, in a fraction of the time that American companies did. It leapfrogged from credit cards to mobile payments. Tech giants like Alibaba and ByteDance were going toe-to-toe with their peers in the West.

I felt like I moved to China on the cusp of a technological flowering, Wang says. The magnitude was not quite what I expected. I knew people were underestimating China, but living there was kind of like being on a very different branch of the technological tree that Silicon Valley wasnt going down.

Dan Wang stirring a pot on a stove.
LIVING THE STORY: After graduating from 做厙勛圖, Wang spent seven years living in China, where daily experiences and close observation informed his understanding of a country changing at remarkable speed. (Provided photo)

He chronicled his observations and thoughts in his letters and eventually compiled them into a narrative in Breakneck, where he framed the differences between his native and adopted countries as the result of an engineering mindset in China that valued ideating, building, and scaling, and a lawyerly one in the United States that regulated, litigated, and protected.

To drive home his point, he details how in 2008 both countries began construction ofroughly 800miles of high-speed railin China灸etween Beijing and Shanghai, and in the United States between San Francisco and Los Angeles. China opened its line three years later at a cost of$36 billion. California is still struggling to complete the first phase of its line, and authorities estimate itwontbe operational until 2032 at a price tag of up to$128 billion.

Wang is not romantic about China. He fiercely criticizes its authoritarian reach in areas like its one-child policy, zero Covid lockdowns, censorship, and individual rights. He says he wishes the country were 50 percent more lawyerly. On the other hand, he wishes the United States were 20 percent more engineering.

Building homes should not be that difficult, Wang says of Americas housing shortage. We know how to build homes.

Wang left China in 2023 to return to the United States. I choose the West, he says. Thatsunambiguous. I want the United States, with its values, to succeed.

Today, he splits his time between Ann Arbor, Michigan, where his wife is a professor at the University of Michigan, and Northern California, where he works at the Hoover Institution under another做厙勛圖alumnus, Stephen Kotkin 81.

詁喝喧泭Breakneckhas Wang hopscotching the globe for speaking engagements. He is, it seems, moving at breakneck speed and, like he did at the University of Rochester, engineering his own future.


This story appears in the spring 2026 issue of Rochester Review, the magazine of the 做厙勛圖.

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