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YSM Issue 87.4

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F R O M T H E E D I T O R

Crime, Justice, and Science

Welcome back to another semester with the Yale Scientific. The entire masthead is excited

to continue expanding its print and online coverage, and we are thrilled to begin working

with the Class of 2018.

To explain the story behind this issue, I should pull back the curtain on our usual editorial

process: in selecting the themes for each issue, we always pick a theme first and pitch articles

topics afterwards. But with the start of a new academic year, for this issue we decided to

take a different approach: we heard article pitches first and let a theme come to us.

And so, at a time not long after the execution of an American journalist and the Ferguson

shooting that sparked national outrage, several of our articles came to converge on one

central question, one that seemed to reflect a pressing issue on the minds of many Yalies—

crime and justice.

For many scientists, this theme represents volumes of questions that we can spend

lifetimes unraveling. How does changing technology redefine the law? What is science’s

role in tracking and analyzing crime? And how can scientists help citizens—not just victims

of crime, but also the perpetrators themselves—achieve justice?

Many research questions are devoted to technologies that deter or track down crime:

advances in forensic science that aid law enforcement, for example, or the use of quantum

cryptography as a new defense against cyber attacks. Other scientific solutions are less blackand-white:

In the wake of a New Haven “heroin epidemic” this year, Dr. David Fiellin at

the Yale School of Medicine recently co-authored a paper on a controversial drug that treats

opiate addiction (pg. 22). The drug mitigates withdrawal symptoms, but it’s also vulnerable

to abuse if improperly prescribed. And while there are no clear answers to combating opioid

addiction just yet, the numerous debates on the drug’s availability reveal that “justice” is a

loaded word. More often than not, finding the fairest scientific outcome depends on who

you ask to be the judge.

In their efforts to tackle crime and injustice, members of the scientific community have

also been creating change from within. With exclusive interviews from Drs. Joan Steitz and

Vivan Irish, this issue’s cover story on page 18 highlights the growing network of women

scientists at Yale.

We hope you enjoy reading this issue of the Yale Scientific on “Crime, Justice, and Science,”

and we thank you for your continued support.

A B O U T T H E A R T

Rebecca Su

Editor-in-Chief

The cover of this issue, photographed by Katherine Lin, features

a group of undergraduate women majoring in science and

engineering at Yale. The photo was taken at Kroon Hall, the

School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. Pictured from

left to right are Nicole Tsai (SY ’16), Rachel Yost-Dubrow (ES

’16), Aurora Xu (MC ’16), Tessa Adler (ES ’17), Liz Vincent (MC

’15), Sara Torres (ES ’15), Marion Hirshberg (PC ’16), Genevieve

Sertic (PC ’18), and Myka Perusek (SM ’17).

Editorial apology: Issue 87.3 incorrectly attributed the photo of Professor Brian Scassellati on pg.

13 to Shuncong Gu. This photo was taken by Logan Stone (DC ’15).

Editor-in-Chief

Managing Editors

News Editor

Features Editor

Articles Editor

Online Editors

Copy Editors

Yale Scientific

M A G A Z I N E

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OCTOBER 2014 VOL. 87 NO. 4

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Staff

Tessa Adler

Milana Bochkur Dratver

Amanda Buckingham

Patrick Demkowicz

Suryabrata Dutta

Malini Gandhi

Yuki Hayashi

Emma Healy

Lidiya Kukova

Annalisa Leinbach

Sienna Li

Advisory Board

Kurt Zilm, Chair

Priyamvada Natarajan

Fred Volkmar

Stanley Eisenstat

Melinda Smith

Peter Kindlmann

Werner Wolf

John Wettlaufer

William Summers

Jeremiah Quinlan

Sean Barrett

Carl Seefried

Audrey Luo

Amey Mahajan

Jacob Marks

Casey McLaughlin

Amanda Mei

Zachary Miller

Theresa Oei

Christopher Paolini

Isabelle Rossi De Leon

Kevin Salinas

Genevieve Sertic

Rebecca Su

Chanthia Ma

Naaman Mehta

Andrew Qi

Payal Marathe

Julia Rothchild

Grace Cao

Jason Young

Christina de Fontnouvelle

Jiahe Gu

Kevin Wang

Carrie Cao

Rachel Lawrence

Aparna Nathan

Aviva Abusch

Sofia Braunstein

Allison Cheung

Jenna DiRito

Nicole Tsai

Katherine Lin

Claudia Shin

Aurora Xu

Jasper Han

Adam Pissaris

Mina Himwich

Emma Graham

Zachary Mankoff

Claudia Shin

Karthik Ardhanareeswaran

Jessica Hahne

Danielle Stamer

Theresa Steinmeyer

Andrew Sung

Jessica Tantavit

Laurie Wang

Kathryn Ward

Summer Wu

Rachel Yost-Dubrow

Christina Chi Zhang

Holly Zhou

Chemistry

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Child Study Center

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Emeritus

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History of Science, Medicine & Public Health

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Yale Science & Engineering Association

The Yale Scientific Magazine (YSM) is published four times a year

by Yale Scientific Publications, Inc. Third class postage paid in New

Haven, CT 06520. Non-profit postage permit number 01106 paid

for May 19, 1927 under the act of August 1912. ISN:0091-287. We

reserve the right to edit any submissions, solicited or unsolicited, for

publication. This magazine is published by Yale College students,

and Yale University is not responsible for its contents. Perspectives

expressed by authors do not necessarily reflect the opinions of YSM.

We retain the right to reprint contributions, both text and graphics,

in future issues as well as a non-exclusive right to reproduce these

in electronic form. The YSM welcomes comments and feedback.

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the author’s name and contact information. We reserve the right to

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to ysm@yale.edu.

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