Brain, Bias, and Being
AZA Allsop and Bruce Birren
AZA Allsop, MD, PhD
AZA Allsop is a first-generation American who grew up in Trinidad before living in a number of different states on the East Coast. He studied Biology, Philosophy, and Jazz Studies at North Carolina Central University before carrying out his research training in the Tye lab at the Picower Institute for Learning and Memory at MIT as part of the Harvard Medical School-MIT MD PhD program. He studies how social information is computed, integrated, and biased in the brain in hopes of elucidating the neural circuits responsible for fundamental social behaviors. His research is guided by the belief that deconstructing these mechanisms will provide a better understanding of how social groups function and offer insights into enhancing the development and function of society at large.
AZA also teaches mindfulness and awareness of social biases as tools that help enhance empathy, social justice, health equity, and wellness. He is the co-founder of Renaissance Entertainment LLC, a company that operates at the intersection of music, science, and community building to promote a culture of wellness. In addition to writing, producing, and recording music, he does neuroscience research and provides clinical care as a resident in the Department of Psychiatry at Yale University.
Bruce Birren, PhD
Bruce Birren is an Institute Scientist at the Broad Institute and Director of the Broad’s Genomic Center for Infectious Diseases. His research focuses on developing and applying new laboratory and computational methods for genome analysis, across a wide variety of organisms. He founded the Broad’s Diversity Initiative and an institute-wide mentoring program and is the founding advisor to Women@Broad.
Bruce is a Master Facilitator for the National Research Mentoring Network and for the Center for the Improvement of Mentored Experiences in Research, facilitating workshops on mentorship, with a focus on culturally aware mentoring. He teaches and leads workshops to develop skills for communicating science and awareness of how aspects of our identities influence access and success within the culture of science and perpetuate overrepresentation in research careers of specific groups at the expense of others.
Photo credit: Donald Raymond
Workshop Hosts
Here are just a few of the institutions and organizations that have hosted our workshops.