Michael Levin

Michael Levin

Biologist

Michael Levin wearing a blue sweater.

Michael Levin is a developmental and synthetic biologist at Tufts University, where he is the Vannevar Bush Distinguished Professor and serves as director of the Allen Discovery Center at Tufts and the Tufts Center for Regenerative and Developmental Biology.

Prior to college, Michael Levin worked as a software engineer and independent contractor in the field of scientific computing. He attended Tufts University, interested in artificial intelligence and unconventional computation. To explore the algorithms by which the biological world implemented complex adaptive behavior, he got dual B.S. degrees, in CS and in Biology and then received a PhD from Harvard University.

He led an independent laboratory from 2000 to 2007 at Forsyth Institute, Harvard. Now, his lab at Tufts studies anatomical and behavioral decision-making at multiple scales of biological, artificial, and hybrid systems.

Two spherical, yellowish biological structures are positioned side by side against a dark background.
8 min
This biologist built a living robot from frog cells — and it could hold the key to the future of regenerative medicine.
A faint, grayscale image of a classical statue’s face with soft features and minimal details visible against a plain background.
5 min
How do “you” emerge from a collection of cells? A biologist explains.
Black and white abstract drawing of a bull with geometric shapes and bold outlines, standing on a plain background.
5 min
Evolution doesn’t fix things — it reinvents them. A biologist explains.
John Templeton Foundation
Black and white illustration of a plant stem cross-section with honeycomb-like cell structure, shown on a green background.
8 min
We know that humans are an intelligent species. But this biologist breaks down the intelligence of each of our cells — and it will blow your mind.