David Lazer is University Distinguished Professor in the Department of Political Science and College of Computer and Information Science. His research interests include group learning in technology-mediated environments; consensus and opinion formation in groups, particularly in political settings, or pertaining to governance.
Research areas
Office location
Office location
177 Huntington Ave
New College of the Humanities
Devon House
58 St Katharine’s Way
London, E1W 1LP, UK
Devon House
58 St Katharine’s Way
London, E1W 1LP, UK
The Roux Institute
100 Fore St
Portland, ME 04101
100 Fore St
Portland, ME 04101
Room
Desk
1022
Boston, MA 02115
*Primarily remote
Portland, ME
Contact
d.lazer@northeastern.edu
Download CV
Personal website
@davidlazer

Publications
Featured media
August 6, 2024
Harris picks Walz for VP: How social media savvy and cable TV shape voter perceptionHarris picks Walz for VP: How social media savvy and cable TV shape voter perceptionNGN
July 23, 2024
With Biden out of the 2024 presidential race, how soon will pollsters have a read on how Kamala Harris is faring against Trump?With Biden out of the 2024 presidential race, how soon will pollsters have a read on how Kamala Harris is faring against Trump?NGN
July 21, 2024
With Joe Biden out of the race, Kamala Harris’ path forward ‘will not be easy,’ experts sayWith Joe Biden out of the race, Kamala Harris’ path forward ‘will not be easy,’ experts sayNGN
July 9, 2024
Biden's poor debate performance had almost no impact on voter preference, new report saysBiden's poor debate performance had almost no impact on voter preference, new report saysNGN
June 5, 2024
Banning Twitter users reduced misinformation and improved discourse after Jan. 6, Northeastern research suggestsBanning Twitter users reduced misinformation and improved discourse after Jan. 6, Northeastern research suggestsNGN
May 22, 2024
Biden is losing (and Trump is gaining) support, especially among young voters, Northeastern-led research findsBiden is losing (and Trump is gaining) support, especially among young voters, Northeastern-led research findsNGN