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Matthew Weed
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Rolling on outa here
When warm weather beckoned this spring, genetics graduate student Matthew
Weed joined fellow students studying outdoors for the first time in his
six years at the School of Medicine. Weed, who is blind, used new wireless
technology for his Macintosh laptop to listen to articles being read aloud
and to check his e-mail—all in the semibucolic setting of the Harkness
Courtyard.

Weed is close to completing the dissertation on science and public policy
that was just taking shape when he was profiled by Yale Medicine
three years ago [“Bringing
Science Into Focus,” Summer 2000]. He is studying “what
society decides to do about controversial research: how to regulate it,
how to assimilate it.” Part of his analysis compares how policy-makers
in the United States and the United Kingdom regulate scientific research
in areas such as stem cells and cloning. “Different countries come
to different policy-making decisions. Why? I’m interested in the
decisions themselves and what the mechanisms and who the contributors
were.”

Weed could have studied this topic in a political science department,
but he says he would have missed an important element: “exposure
to how scientists think about science and how physicians think about medicine.”
He said researchers are very reluctant to confront the fact that the practical
uses of their discoveries may frighten or repel society. Scientists fear
that if potential problems are made salient, they’ll lose their
freedom, says Weed.

But facing these issues is not optional, Weed argues. “No single
government can stop knowledge from being created.” The challenge
is “how to assimilate knowledge even if we’re uncomfortable
with it.”

Weed hopes to find a job in Washington with a large corporation or a government
policy-making agency. He is considering strategies for how to incorporate
medical support for his diabetes into his daily life once he leaves the
university, where volunteer students monitor Weed’s glucose levels
and inject insulin twice daily. When he’s away from his laptop,
Weed still goes inline skating (with a friend to guide him), and he plans
this summer to try water skiing for the first time.

Cathy Shufro
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