“Comings and goings set the stage for doings and sayings,” Pentland said, illustrating how progress depends on paths intersecting. Using a hospital setting as an example, he showed how the paths of patients, doctors and nurses must connect to move forward. If a patient doesn’t cross paths with a doctor, they can’t progress through their patient journey.
The content of the talk reflected the broader intent behind the series: to make research accessible to faculty across disciplines and to highlight how new knowledge can be translated into classrooms, textbooks and executive education.
“This series is meant to draw in an audience beyond any single department,” Hollenbeck said. “When faculty from different areas hear each other’s work and start asking questions together, that’s where real innovation begins.”
The Broad Internal Speaker Series will continue throughout the year, featuring faculty from across the college who are asked to present their work in a way that resonates with a general academic audience. By centering process, collaboration and shared inquiry, the series represents a strategic investment in Broad’s long-term research mission.
As Pentland noted, the core idea behind path nets is universal: intersecting paths create opportunity. With this new series, Broad is intentionally creating more of those intersections and more opportunities for research to flourish across the college.