(Re)presenting Human Population Database Projects: virtually designing and siting biomedical informatics ventures

This dissertation examines the politics of representation in biotechnosciences. Through web representations, I examine three emerging endeavors that propose to create large-scale human population genomic databases to study complex, common diseases and conditions. These projects were initiated in dif...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Koay, Pei P.
Other Authors: Science and Technology Studies, Burian, Richard M., Boler, Megan M., Luke, Timothy W., La Berge, Ann F., Halfon, Saul E.
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Virginia Tech 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27709
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05142003-233043/
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spelling ftvirginiatec:oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/27709 2024-05-19T07:43:00+00:00 (Re)presenting Human Population Database Projects: virtually designing and siting biomedical informatics ventures Koay, Pei P. Science and Technology Studies Burian, Richard M. Boler, Megan M. Luke, Timothy W. La Berge, Ann F. Halfon, Saul E. 2003-04-07 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27709 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05142003-233043/ unknown Virginia Tech KOAYPDISSERTATION.pdf etd-05142003-233043 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27709 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05142003-233043/ In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ body studies politics of information representations of science cyberspace studies politics of biomedicine and technoscience case studies in population genomics and DNA data Dissertation 2003 ftvirginiatec 2024-05-01T00:35:40Z This dissertation examines the politics of representation in biotechnosciences. Through web representations, I examine three emerging endeavors that propose to create large-scale human population genomic databases to study complex, common diseases and conditions. These projects were initiated in different nations (US, UK, and Iceland), created under different institutional configurations, and are at various stages of development. The websites, which are media technologies do not simply reflect and promote these endeavors. Rather, they help shape these database projects in which the science is uncertain and the technologies not yet built. Thus, they are constitutive technologies that affect the construction of these database projects. More needs to be done to explore how to interpret the 'virtual' realm and how it relates to the 'real' world and specific situations. By bringing hypertextuality into the analysis, I explore how knowledges, practices, and subjectivities are created. By adapting the methods of a number of science and technology (STS) authors, I develop a more dynamic lens in which to investigate web representations and 'emerging' biomedical projects. My concern however, is not only in what represents what, but how representations are constructed. The power of the latter derives from its invisibility. In re-conceptualizing representation and new media technologies, I show that these sites are techno-social spaces for creating knowledge, specific ways of seeing, and practicing biomedicine today. The narrowing time/space between generating data, releasing information, and incorporating publics into their endeavors raises crucial issues as to how biomedicine is represented and how broader audiences are engaged. In the dominant discourses, these projects are all situated within biomedical, (post)genomic, and information revolutions. Here, they hang on the technological object, the database, with the ability to contain what we are coming to understand as life/genetic/bio information. Through the moves of ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Iceland VTechWorks (VirginiaTech)
institution Open Polar
collection VTechWorks (VirginiaTech)
op_collection_id ftvirginiatec
language unknown
topic body studies
politics of information
representations of science
cyberspace studies
politics of biomedicine and technoscience
case studies in population genomics and DNA data
spellingShingle body studies
politics of information
representations of science
cyberspace studies
politics of biomedicine and technoscience
case studies in population genomics and DNA data
Koay, Pei P.
(Re)presenting Human Population Database Projects: virtually designing and siting biomedical informatics ventures
topic_facet body studies
politics of information
representations of science
cyberspace studies
politics of biomedicine and technoscience
case studies in population genomics and DNA data
description This dissertation examines the politics of representation in biotechnosciences. Through web representations, I examine three emerging endeavors that propose to create large-scale human population genomic databases to study complex, common diseases and conditions. These projects were initiated in different nations (US, UK, and Iceland), created under different institutional configurations, and are at various stages of development. The websites, which are media technologies do not simply reflect and promote these endeavors. Rather, they help shape these database projects in which the science is uncertain and the technologies not yet built. Thus, they are constitutive technologies that affect the construction of these database projects. More needs to be done to explore how to interpret the 'virtual' realm and how it relates to the 'real' world and specific situations. By bringing hypertextuality into the analysis, I explore how knowledges, practices, and subjectivities are created. By adapting the methods of a number of science and technology (STS) authors, I develop a more dynamic lens in which to investigate web representations and 'emerging' biomedical projects. My concern however, is not only in what represents what, but how representations are constructed. The power of the latter derives from its invisibility. In re-conceptualizing representation and new media technologies, I show that these sites are techno-social spaces for creating knowledge, specific ways of seeing, and practicing biomedicine today. The narrowing time/space between generating data, releasing information, and incorporating publics into their endeavors raises crucial issues as to how biomedicine is represented and how broader audiences are engaged. In the dominant discourses, these projects are all situated within biomedical, (post)genomic, and information revolutions. Here, they hang on the technological object, the database, with the ability to contain what we are coming to understand as life/genetic/bio information. Through the moves of ...
author2 Science and Technology Studies
Burian, Richard M.
Boler, Megan M.
Luke, Timothy W.
La Berge, Ann F.
Halfon, Saul E.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Koay, Pei P.
author_facet Koay, Pei P.
author_sort Koay, Pei P.
title (Re)presenting Human Population Database Projects: virtually designing and siting biomedical informatics ventures
title_short (Re)presenting Human Population Database Projects: virtually designing and siting biomedical informatics ventures
title_full (Re)presenting Human Population Database Projects: virtually designing and siting biomedical informatics ventures
title_fullStr (Re)presenting Human Population Database Projects: virtually designing and siting biomedical informatics ventures
title_full_unstemmed (Re)presenting Human Population Database Projects: virtually designing and siting biomedical informatics ventures
title_sort (re)presenting human population database projects: virtually designing and siting biomedical informatics ventures
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2003
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27709
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05142003-233043/
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation KOAYPDISSERTATION.pdf
etd-05142003-233043
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27709
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05142003-233043/
op_rights In Copyright
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
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