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Eric S. Lander

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

4.3/5
3 reviews
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About Eric S. Lander at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

Eric S. Lander holds an academic position at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Their scholarly work centers on Genomics and Chromatin Dynamics, Cancer Genomics and Diagnostics, and Genetic Associations and Epidemiology. With over 521,513 citations to their name, their contributions have had a measurable and lasting impact on the field. An H-index of 271 underscores the consistent quality and influence of their published research.

Research Areas

Genomics and Chromatin DynamicsCancer Genomics and DiagnosticsGenetic Associations and EpidemiologyRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsGenetic Mapping and Diversity in Plants and Animals

Rating Breakdown

Supervision Style4.0
Responsiveness4.0
Workload4.0
Funding Support4.3
Communication3.7

Lab Environment & Research Profile

Academic data verified · April 2026 · Next sync: May 2026

Lab Environment

Supervision4.0/5
Responsiveness4.0/5
Funding4.3/5
Communication3.7/5
Work-Life Balance4.3/5

Among reviewed supervisors at MIT, Eric S. Lander scores in the top 25% for Funding (4.3/5).

Academic Output

Total Citations521,513

Top 5% globally

Publications897

Highly prolific researcher

h-index271

Nobel-level impact

i10-index552

Exceptional breadth

Reviews (3)

A
Anonymous4/8/2026
3.0

If you want to be at the epicenter of genomics, this is the place, but don’t expect much 1-on-1 time with the PI. He’s basically an academic celebrity and is constantly traveling for policy work or board meetings, so you’ll mostly be mentored by senior postdocs. It’s the ultimate hands-off experience where you’re expected to navigate the Broad Institute ecosystem on your own, but the resources and networking are unmatched.

A
Anonymous1/14/2026
5.0

The funding and infrastructure here are insane—you’ll never worry about the cost of sequencing or high-end compute. However, it’s easy to feel like a small cog in a very large, complex machine given how many projects are running simultaneously. If you aren't assertive and able to advocate for your own research direction, you might get lost in the shuffle of the larger Human Genome legacy projects.

A
Anonymous11/28/2025
5.0

The lab feels more like a fast-paced startup or a government agency than a traditional academic group. There’s a huge emphasis on the "big picture" and paper output that actually changes the field, which can be exhilarating but also incredibly high-pressure. You’ll get used to seeing your PI on the news or advising the White House, which is cool, but it means the internal meetings are rare and you better have your data perfectly polished when they actually happen.

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