Faculty

faculty photo

Thomas Macintyre

Lecturer
School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts
faculty photo

Michael MacMahon

Lecturer
School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts
faculty photo

Keith Maddox

Professor and Department Chair of Psychology
Psychology
Social Cognition, Stereotyping, Prejudice, Discrimination
faculty photo

Anne Mahoney

Associate Teaching Professor
Classical Studies
Classical tradition and reception; linguistics; ancient drama; ancient mathematics; Latin, Greek, and Sanskrit language and literature
Person Placeholder

Magdalena Malinowska

Associate Teaching Professor
Romance Studies
Secondary language acquisition
faculty photo

Courtney Maloney

Lecturer
English
First-year writing, authentic and equitable assessment, social/emotional learning, reflective learning.
faculty photo

Michael Mandel

Lecturer
School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts
faculty photo

W. Anthony Mann

Professor
Physics & Astronomy
Experimental high energy physics, elementary particle interactions, neutrino oscillations, neutrino-nucleus interactions, baryon instability searches. Design and execution of experimental measurements that reveal or constrain the existence of new elementary particles, that delineate the properties of known elementary particles, and that quantify the interactions and symmetries that govern fundamental energy systems of the subatomic realm.
faculty photo

Beatrice Manz

Professor Emerita
History
Middle East and Inner Asia
Person Placeholder

Anatole Manzi

Lecturer
Community Health
Person Placeholder

Teresa Marcelin

Lecturer
Romance Studies
Spanish Language
faculty photo

Danilo Marchesini

Dean of Research for the School of Arts and Sciences and Leonard and Jane Holmes Bernstein Professor
The School of Arts and Sciences
Astronomy; galaxy formation and evolution; extra-galactic surveys; active galactic nuclei; near-infrared astronomy Understanding how galaxies form and evolve means understanding how the tiny differences in the distribution of matter inferred from the cosmic microwave background radiation grew and evolved into the galaxies we see today. The working hypothesis is that galaxies form under the influence of gravity, and galaxy formation can be seen as a two-step process. First, the gravity of dark matter causes the tiny seeds in the matter distribution to grow bigger with time. As they grow more massive, the gravitational attraction becomes stronger, making it easier for these structures to attract additional matter. As the dark matter structures grow, they pull in also the gas, made of hydrogen and helium, which is the primary ingredient for the formation of stars, and hence for the formation of the stellar content of galaxies. The formation of the stellar content inside these dark matter structures involves many physical processes that are much more complicated and quite poorly understood from a theoretical perspective. These physical processes include, for example, how gas cools and collapses to form stars, the process of star formation itself, merging of galaxies, feedback from star formation and from active super-massive black holes. My research activity in the past decade has focused on understanding how galaxies formed after the Big Bang, and how their properties (e.g., the stellar mass, the level of star formation activity, the morphology and structural parameters, the level of activity of the hosted super-massive black hole, etc.) have changed as a function of cosmic time. Since we cannot follow the same galaxy evolving in time, we need to connect the galaxies we observe at a certain redshift (i.e. a certain snapshot in time) to those we observe at a smaller redshift (i.e., at a later time in cosmic history) in order to infer how the properties of galaxies have actually changed and what physical mechanisms are responsible for these changes. The better we understand the galaxy properties at a certain time and the more finely in time we can probe the cosmic history, the easier it becomes to connect galaxies' populations seen at different snapshots in time, linking progenitors and descendants across cosmic time. Ultimately, my research aims at understanding what galaxy population seen at one epoch will evolve into at a later epoch, and what physical processes are responsible for the inferred changes in the galaxies' properties. In order to do this, I have adopted two different but complementary approaches. The first approach consists of statistical studies of the galaxy populations at different cosmic times; the second approach consists of detailed studies of individual galaxies to robustly derive their properties.
faculty photo

Reiko Marcos

Lecturer
International Literary and Cultural Studies
faculty photo

Elizabeth Marfeo

Associate Professor and Department Chair of Community Health
Community Health
Health outcomes measurement development, work disability, productive aging, health policy
Person Placeholder

Tamara Marquez-Raffetto

Lecturer
Romance Studies
Latin American studies, twentieth-century Latin American narrative, Golden Age literature
faculty photo

Steven Marrone

Professor Emeritus
History
Medieval, Early Modern Europe
faculty photo

Helen Marrow

Professor
Sociology
Immigration; Emigration; Race and Ethnicity; Social Class; Inequality and Social Policy; Health; Qualitative Methods
faculty photo

David Martin

Assistant Professor
Physics & Astronomy
- Extra-solar planets "exoplanets" - Planets in multiple-star systems, including circumbinary planets - Stellar populations and fundamental parameters - White dwarfs - Black holes - M-dwarfs - Stellar activity (spots and flares) - Celestial mechanics, including the Kozai-Lidov effect - Planet formation - Observational astrophysics
faculty photo

Diana Martinez

Associate Professor
History of Art and Architecture
American architecture history, global architecture history, post-colonial studies, materiality
Person Placeholder

Sarah Mass

Assistant Professor
History
Britain and the World, urban history, history of capitalism, histories of multiculturalism
faculty photo

William Masters

Professor
Food and Nutrition Economics, Policy, and Programs
Economics and policy analysis for agriculture, food and nutrition
faculty photo

Carol Mastrodomenico

Lecturer
Music
Opera Ensemble
faculty photo

Nimah Mazaheri

Professor and Dean of Academic Affairs
The School of Arts and Sciences
Comparative Politics, International Development, Public Policy, Energy, Environmental Studies, the Middle East
faculty photo

H. Muoki Mbunga

Assistant Professor
History
Modern East Africa
faculty photo

Andrew McClellan

Professor
History of Art and Architecture
History of museums, exhibitions, and collecting; history of art history; Early Modern European art and theory
faculty photo

Jeffrey McConnell

Lecturer
Philosophy
Metaphysics, Philosophy of Mind, Moral Theory
faculty photo

Daniel McCusker

Senior Lecturer
Theatre, Dance, and Performance Studies
faculty photo

Brandon McDonald

Rumsey Family Assistant Professor in Interdisciplinary Studies
Classical Studies
Environmental history of antiquity; Roman history and archaeology, especially the Eastern Mediterranean; health and disease in antiquity; Roman economy; climate history; ancient urbanism
faculty photo

John McDonald

Professor
Music
Composition and new music pedagogy; intermedia collaboration involving composing and performing; solo and chamber music composition, performance and recording; writing new music for young and non-professional performers; music applications for visual art and science; advocacy of new and overlooked composers through research and performance
faculty photo

Eoin McGuirk

J.C. Keogh and Family Assistant Professor
Economics
Political Economy, Development Economics, Applied Microeconomics
faculty photo

Christopher McHugh

Lecturer
Economics
Monetary Economics
faculty photo

Melissa McInerney

Max and Herta Neubauer Endowed Professor in Economics
Economics
Public Economics, Health Economics, Labor Economics, and Applied Microeconomics
faculty photo

Meredith McLain

Assistant Professor
Political Science
American Politics, Separation of Powers, Presidency, Unilateral Policymaking, Executive Politics, Congressional Oversight
faculty photo

Kelly McLaughlin

Associate Professor
Biology
Molecular Development (Organogenesis: Development, Remodeling, Regeneration)
faculty photo

Michael McLaughlin

Lecturer
Music
Music Theory and Klezmer Ensemble
Person Placeholder

Loren Mcmahon

Lecturer
Occupational Therapy
faculty photo

Margaret McMillan

Neary Family Professor of International Relations
Economics
International Trade and Investment, Structural Change, Industrialization, Africa