Summary
Noah Haber is a Principal Research Scientist with eight years of interdisciplinary experience at the intersection of causal inference, epidemiology, health economics, and meta-science, currently leading research at the Center for Open Science. He blends rigorous econometric training from Harvard with applied epidemiologic work on global HIV/AIDS measurement and large-scale evidence synthesis developed during postdoctoral roles at UNC and Stanford METRICS. Noah focuses on improving the actionability of research by developing methods and systems to evaluate causal strength across the research-to-decision pipeline, helping policymakers interpret evidentiary uncertainty. He also brings a hands-on design and product perspective through his role leading design at Dead Edge Design, reflecting a rare mix of quantitative rigor and practical implementation. Colleagues know him for bridging conceptual gaps between epidemiology and econometrics and for scaling evidence review to inform real-world decisions.
8 years of coding experience
7 years of employment as a software developer
Doctor of Science (ScD), Global Health, Health Economics, Doctor of Science (ScD), Global Health, Health Economics at Harvard School of Public Health
Master of Science (MSc), International Health Economics, Master of Science (MSc), International Health Economics at London School of Economics and Political Science
BA, Economics, Public Health, Political Science, BA, Economics, Public Health, Political Science at Brandeis University