Scott Carlson

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I'm a first year PhD student in MIT's department of Bioengineering. This content is questionable at best since I'm still figuring out the whole Wiki thing. For now you can download my CV. Feel free to read whatever happens to be here.

Skip to the Bio if you'd rather read my life story than my research.

Research

Proteomics

Biostatistics

Bioengineering

Curriculum Vitae

Other Interests

Politics

Martial Arts

Europe

Computer Programming


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Bio

Go back to Research if you got here by mistake and don't really want to read my life story.

High School I'm from Seattle WA, in the Pacific Northwest. Early on I planned to be a computer programmer, and I taught myself several programming languages. That plan lasted exactly one week after I got my first programming job. If you've ever worked in a grey cubicle in corporate America then you understand why I got out. Otherwise just be grateful that you don't understand that particular type of pain. After a string of random events I ended up doing genetics and computational biology with Leonid Kruglyak at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. I spent three summers there working on all sorts of computational genetics (genetic linkage analysis, haplotype inference, phylogeny). Since then, all my research has focused on that stuff.

College Looking at colleges it was a close call between Stanford and MIT. Taking it right to the deadline, Stanford won out because of more attractive undergrads and better weather. Turned out to be a good choice because here I am at grad school, and now I've been at both places. (don't be stupid, if weather or hot students actually mattered I'd be at UCSD right now. I chose Stanford for academic reasons) I majored in Chemistry with a minor in Bio. Prof. Richard Zare was my academic advisor but I never even looked at doing research in pure chemistry.

In my sophomore year I got involved in biostatistics in medical research with Dr. Harvey Cohen in the Dept of Pediatrics at the Stanford med school. All the details are in the Research. The experience completely reshaped my perspective on science, especially working with data from premature infants. The big picture hits you fast and hard when you find out that half the children in your dataset did not survive.

So that's how I ended up moving from Chemistry to Biostastics to Bioengineering. Along the way I spent some time in Oxford reading History of Science (please excuse the Britishisms, "reading" is the Oxford was of say "took classes in." At least it would be if Oxford had classes in anything resembling the way we think about them). The time in England inspired me


Interlude: England

MIT