Relations (1)

related 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts

Harvard University and Yale University are linked through their shared historical policies regarding the admission of African American students [1], their mutual involvement in proposed essay contests [2], and the professional transition of Nicholas Christakis between the two institutions [3]. Additionally, both universities are represented by principal investigators within the Cogitate Consortium [4].

Facts (4)

Sources
Slavery, the Slave Trade, and Brown University slaveryandjusticereport.brown.edu Brown University 2 facts
claimHarvard University and Yale University did not admit African American students into their undergraduate colleges until the 1870s.
accountAfter the failure to hold an essay contest at Brown University, Moses Brown proposed endowing similar essay prizes at Harvard, Yale, and the College of New Jersey (Princeton), but these contests also never occurred.
Rethinking Consciousness: When Science Puts Itself to the Test maxplanckneuroscience.org Max Planck Neuroscience 1 fact
claimThe principal investigators of the Cogitate Consortium study on consciousness theories include Liad Mudrik (Tel Aviv University), Michael Pitts (Reed College), Ole Jensen (University of Oxford), Floris de Lange (Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging), Gabriel Kreiman (Harvard University), Huan Luo (Peking University), Hal Blumenfeld (Yale University), Simon Henin (NYU Langone Health), Giulio Tononi (University of Wisconsin–Madison), Stanislas Dehaene (CEA NeuroSpin), and Christof Koch (Allen Institute).
9 More Higher Ed Names in the Epstein Files insidehighered.com Inside Higher Ed 1 fact
claimNicholas Christakis contacted Jeffrey Epstein after moving from Harvard to Yale to arrange a meeting for the purpose of discussing funding for the Nicholas Christakis laboratory.