Jessica Huang is an undergraduate student at McGill University studying Pharmacology and Philosophy. She currently works in health policy, law, and bioethics research at the Centre of Genomics and Policy, and has previously worked in Patient Experience at global biopharmaceutical firm AbbVie and in extracellular matrix research in McGill's Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology. She has helped curate architectural exhibitions at McGill Rare Books & Special Collections and has served as Editor-in-Chief for multiple art magazine publications. In 2023, she received a Leader in Science Award from the McGill Science Undergraduate Society. Her varied collection of experiences has shaped her conviction that the most meaningful questions we face require drawing from multiple disciplines. She is fascinated by how integrating different ways of knowing can sharpen our pursuit of truth. Driven by this, she aims to explore polymathic thinking and why interdisciplinary approaches to knowledge matter in our increasingly fragmented world.
Jessica Huang is an undergraduate student at McGill University studying Pharmacology and Philosophy. She currently works in health policy, law, and bioethics research at the Centre of Genomics and Policy, and has previously worked in Patient Experience at global biopharmaceutical firm AbbVie and in extracellular matrix research in McGill's Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology. She has helped curate architectural exhibitions at McGill Rare Books & Special Collections and has served as Editor-in-Chief for multiple art magazine publications. In 2023, she received a Leader in Science Award from the McGill Science Undergraduate Society. Her varied collection of experiences has shaped her conviction that the most meaningful questions we face require drawing from multiple disciplines. She is fascinated by how integrating different ways of knowing can sharpen our pursuit of truth. Driven by this, she aims to explore polymathic thinking and why interdisciplinary approaches to knowledge matter in our increasingly fragmented world.