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shifting labs and switching fields

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Adam Levy: 00:09

Good day, I’m Adam Levy and that is Working Scientist, a Nature Careers podcast. In the present day, shifting labs and shifting self-discipline.

This collection is all about strikes. Whether or not that transfer is with a associate, or one which takes you to a brand new nation. Transferring labs as a tutorial could be a pivotal second.

Properly, right now we’re what occurs when that transfer is mixed with one other, generally even bolder profession shift, shifting disciplines.

How can shifting the science you do improve or exacerbate a transfer from one lab to a different?

For neurologist Ken Kosik, of College of California, Santa Barbara, shifting the placement of his lab, in order that he’s surrounded by a variety of teachers from different disciplines, has remodeled the way in which he does analysis.

I caught up with him and we began out by discussing how he ended up in such an interdisciplinary location.

Ken Kosik: 01:20

Once I completed my neurology residency, I nonetheless was unsure what I actually needed to do. I used to be nonetheless looking.

I spotted that whereas neurology and medication on the whole is a variety of enjoyable to be taught, I discovered myself rather less concerned about really practising it.

I believe the motivations for these fields are a little bit completely different. I actually started, towards the tip of my residency, to turn into interested in analysis and utilized to a laboratory to do solely analysis however remained in a medical college.

After being there for properly over 20 years I got here to offer a chat at Santa Barbara. And so one other life-style, through which the buildings round me weren’t haematology, gastroenterology, neurology. They have been issues like music and structure.

That setting appealed to me immensely. To do analysis in a setting the place there’s a a lot broader variety of educational disciplines. That doesn’t imply that I deserted my medical curiosity. I do a variety of work nonetheless associated to Alzheimer’s illness.

However I’ve simply discovered that the setting the place I’m now, which has a robust part of different sciences, physics, pc science, engineering, in addition to humanities, is rather more conducive to my nature.

Adam Levy: 02:59

The best way you describe it, it sounds very pure and really, very regular factor so that you can do on a private degree. Did everybody else see it that means? Or have been some individuals a bit stunned by this type of resolution?

Ken Kosik: 03:11

I had achieved the rank of professor at Harvard, and folks have been a little bit stunned that one would depart a tenured place like that to go elsewhere.

Adam Levy: 03:22

And when it comes to the precise outcomes of this, have there been advantages to your work in being surrounded by individuals from what could be thought-about very completely different disciplines?

Ken Kosik: 03:34

Huge advantages. I imply, the advantages that I can really doc quantitatively. My impression elements have gone up, you realize, for what they’re price. They’re in all probability not price that a lot.

However I’ve opened up collaborations with chemists, pc scientists, physicists. That has been extraordinarily thrilling for me and actually has been the important thing to success on this atmosphere.

Reaching throughout huge cross disciplinary boundaries, has actually been with most attracted me and has labored out very properly.

That’s to not say that that might work at an earlier stage in a single’s profession.

I made this transition already as a senior investigator, a senior scientist. So I used to be fairly snug in my very own self-discipline.

Adam Levy: 04:25

And has this been welcomed on the opposite aspect of the divide, because it have been? Have physicists additionally being grateful to, to have collaborations with with you on topics, which possibly they wouldnt have touched in any other case?

Ken Kosik: 04:38

It’s been extremely welcoming on the opposite aspect of the divide for a number of causes. One is that as a result of I’m a neuroscientist, I believe individuals in lots of fields are intrigued by neuroscience.

There’s actually an fascinating migration that’s occurring by many individuals in physics, for instance, or pc science which are actually wanting towards neuroscience to attempt to perceive deep studying, synthetic intelligence, in ways in which the mind accomplishes duties that are just like what they wish to do.

Now, I’ll additionally add, although, that coming to the campus the place I did on the College of California, Santa Barbara. At the moment, there was not nice energy in neuroscience.

So I believe individuals needed to get entangled in neuroscience. But it surely was a little bit tough on the opposite aspect to cross over. So my arrival was very, very welcome. And I’ve simply been like, a child in a toy retailer there with the alternatives to collaborate.

Adam Levy: 05:42

My subsequent query is, I suppose, a query of identification, do you assume this variation has shifted you from from contemplating your self a biologist? Or is that also very a lot the way you describe your self as a tutorial?

Ken Kosik: 05:55

I’m nonetheless a biologist, I don’t have any illusions that the esoteric work that is occurring in computation, pc science and physics is one thing that I can do myself.

I’m nonetheless basically the cell biologist, the molecular biologist, the neuroscientist, and that’s a actuality.

Adam Levy: 06:15

Now, as constructive as you have been, I’m very conscious that biologists and physicists and engineers, all of us communicate barely completely different languages.

So how in observe, do you really start to beat this impediment and truly talk throughout these boundaries?

Ken Kosik: 06:33

Sure, I believe there’s a little bit of attempting to grasp what the particular person on the opposite aspect of the boundary can dom what they’re concerned about. And if I meet one other one that does cell biology, I assume an unlimited quantity of data and shared applied sciences to strategy an issue collectively.

Whereas in turning to somebody who’s actually utterly away from these fields, somebody who’s actually not even skilled in biology, we actually must first acknowledge that they’re very sensible individuals, and so they actually don’t want us to elucidate to them simply a variety of the main points of biology 101. They want for us to elucidate to them the sorts of issues we’re grappling with.

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And that’s, I believe, the core to, to success. To pique another person’s curiosity in a website through which they’ll contribute.

Adam Levy: 07:35

Do you may have any ideas or, I suppose even warnings, for people who find themselves attempting to or hope to speak throughout these sorts of divides?

Ken Kosik: 07:45

Attempt to have a dialog and change. It’s, it’s crucial that one doesn’t strategy a collaboration throughout such a fantastic divide as a chance to offer another person a lecture.

It actually is a chance to search out what is going to match inside what they do. Which implies that you could have some understanding of what an engineer or a physicist really does.

Then the subsequent query is, properly, is it actually attainable to even collaborate with somebody who’s considering of issues in 11 dimensions?

So there will be widespread floor, I discovered, I lately have simply begun a dialog with a person who does a variety of quantum concept.

And each of us are concerned about how we will apply a deep studying, machine studying, to our respective fields. And there was a really fascinating change that I’ve begun to have with him on this subject.

And this particular person brings a sophistication about computation that I couldn’t ever obtain.

However but he does probably not know what the issues are in neuroscience which will require a machine studying strategy.

Issues like discerning waveforms in, say, a mind organoid, which is one thing we’re very concerned about.

So I believe that there will be widespread floor with somebody so long as you discover the place the shared curiosity is.

Adam Levy: 09:17

Now you talked about that this type of strategy to analysis won’t work for people who find themselves earlier of their careers. Is there anybody else you’ll say, “Oh, really, possibly this doesn’t fit your specific strategy or your your specific character so properly.”

Ken Kosik: 09:33

It won’t work for everybody. However it could work for those who are earlier of their profession, however differently. I’ll offer you an instance of an individual who got here to my lab lately and was capable of, I believe, do one thing fairly superb.

That is a person who did his PhD in physics, after which determined to do his postdoc with me. He had nice sophistication in each computation and in instrumentation. And he constructed and devised some units for mind recordings, He had no background in biology in any way.

So whereas he was with me, he not solely was ready to make use of his ability set, however he immersed himself within the biology of developmental biology, which is one thing you need to be taught while you’re interested by how and organoid develops, develop sophistication with stem cells, all that sort of factor.

He spent 5 years in my lab, and simply within the final month or two obtained a job with this twin coaching, the place his twin ability set in two, completely very numerous fields was the important thing attractor that obtained him the job.

And naturally, the purpose of each postdoc is to get a job.

Adam Levy: 10:52

Now, who would you say this, this wouldn’t essentially work out for, then?

Ken Kosik: 10:57

I don’t assume it will work essentially if an individual is just about capable of accomplish their targets and their imaginative and prescient, strictly throughout the self-discipline.

It’s not essentially essential for everybody to achieve throughout the divide so broadly. However I believe more and more it’s.

As a result of when you concentrate on all of the sophistication required within the space of optics, to grasp cells, an increasing number of issues with computation to grasp cells, that I believe this side of the organic sciences, the place it’s turning into an increasing number of necessary for us to to achieve throughout boundaries, is turning into extra related.

And in reality, I see the biologist of the longer term as being equally snug with our dwelling turf as we’re with the devices required to review cells, with the computational methods crucial to investigate cells.

Adam Levy: 12:10

That was Ken Kosik. As Ken talked about, this interdisciplinary strategy is not essentially for everybody.

And certainly, shifting labs and shifting self-discipline won’t be the fitting transfer for all teachers in any respect phases of their profession.

Within the first episode of this collection we spoke with Tim Fessenden, who’s now a scientific editor at The Journal of Cell Biology. His PhD centered on the biophysics of cells, after which he determined to make the leap into two unknowns.

Firstly, he was shifting to a brand new lab with a brand new PI.

And secondly, he shifted self-discipline to review how immune cells and tumours work together. So how did he discover shifting self-discipline?

Tim Fessenden: 12:57

You already know, I cherished it. I’m so glad that I do know, I obtained into my alone little nook of immunology. And that’s my disposition, I really feel like I’m a lifelong scholar, you realize, I really feel like somebody who I at all times wish to be the dumbest particular person within the room.

And this was definitely the case in my postdoc. I like to recommend it to anybody, simply because it forces you into a brand new mind-set and forces you to understand completely different investigative instruments {that a} completely different self-discipline has at their disposal, and values.

Adam Levy: 13:28

So shifting the sector of research can convey a number of nice surprises and new studying experiences. However on the similar time, a brand new subject and a brand new lab could be a bit an excessive amount of novelty to juggle unexpectedly.

Tim Fessenden: 13:45

I believe an important factor that I might advise, which turned actually crystal clear for me over the course of my time within the new lab, was that should you’re going to hitch a brand new lab that comes with a set of challenges that you shouldn’t exacerbate by additionally switching fields, which is what I did.

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So I believe issues might need gone rather more easily if I used to be becoming a member of a brand new lab in the identical subject that I knew.

The place I knew all of the methods, I knew all of the background data, I knew the opposite huge gamers within the subject, the place there was some consolation already there, and I might sort of cope with the bumps within the highway of the brand new lab as rather more simply.

Because it was I wanted to be taught immunology, and a variety of new methods. I had by no means labored with mice earlier than.

So all of these issues actually compounded the challenges of a brand new lab. And so I might say do one or the opposite. Change fields, or be part of a brand new lab. In all probability don’t do each. I believe I’m certain some individuals do it efficiently. However in my case, the recommendation I might give us to not sort of mix these challenges

Adam Levy: 14:58

We heard earlier from Ken Kosik, who’s obtained used to collaborating with bodily scientists, regardless of his organic analysis background.

However what about making the shift the opposite means spherical from the laborious physics in direction of the extra life sciences?

Properly, that’s the shift that many physicists make after they transition to medical physics. Jennifer Pursley is a scientific medical physicist at Massachusetts Normal Hospital, with an assistant professor appointment at Harvard Medical College.

However her background was extra centered on particles than sufferers. I caught up along with her and we began out talking about what her present job appears to be like like.

Jennifer Pursley: 15:39

Technically, in accordance with my employer, my work is 80% scientific and 20% analysis. However there’s a variety of flexibility inside medical physics on the whole to decide on the way you wish to spend your time.

And for me, I actually take pleasure in working with college students and mentoring. So I might say that my cut up finally ends up being extra like 50 to 60% scientific, after which 20 to 30% training and instructing.

Adam Levy: 16:10

Now after we discuss scientific work as a medical physicist, what does that truly contain? What are you doing within the clinic?

Jennifer Pursley: 16:17

Sure, so it relies upon lots on what sort of medical physicist you’re.

I’m a radiation remedy physicist. So I work within the radiation oncology division. And our job focuses round treating sufferers with radiation.

So a variety of my scientific duties revolve round ensuring that sufferers are handled safely and successfully with radiation. I additionally help with the physicians designing radiation remedy plans.

Adam Levy: 16:47

Now, how did you really get into this line of labor? Your background isn’t really as a medical physicist?

Jennifer Pursley 16:53

That’s very, very true. My background is a particle physicist. In order a particle physicist, I did my PhD and a postdoc working at Fermi Nationwide Lab in Chicago, Illinois.

And about midway by my postdoc I used to be beginning to consider what I actually needed to be doing with my work.

And I discovered that I actually loved the hands-on points of what I used to be doing as a particle physicist.

I additionally thought that I might be happier if I knew the work that I used to be doing had extra of a direct impression on individuals’s lives.

So I began asking questions. I discovered just a few individuals who had left particle physics. And I talked to them about what they have been doing, and quite a few them had gone into medical physics.

Adam Levy: 17:44

And the way has the expertise really been used?

You talk about these, these motivations, hoping to see the impression of your work extra instantly, for instance. Has that been realized?

Jennifer Pursley: 17:55

It positively has. Medical work is extraordinarily satisfying, in that you simply get to help with sufferers each day, although it’s in a small means.

Typically, there’s a variety of occasions the place what I’m doing isn’t instantly associated to physics, however it’s extra about drawback fixing.

It’s about understanding all the points of every thing that goes right into a affected person’s remedy, and having the ability to see connections and discover errors that different individuals have missed.

And to repair these in order that the affected person is handled successfully and on time. And that’s extraordinarily satisfying,

Adam Levy: 18:34

Was that in any respect a cultural shift concerned in transitioning from a particle physics lab to, yeah, working typically very instantly with sufferers?

Jennifer Pursley: 18:45

There positively was a really massive tradition shift going from a nationwide lab to the hospital atmosphere.

For one factor, the hospital could be very hierarchical.

So studying the hospital hierarchy, but additionally studying the best way to talk with individuals from many various function teams.

So at a nationwide lab, everybody has kind of the identical background. Everybody is available in with a physics diploma or some primary understanding, whether or not it’s undergrad, grad, all the way in which as much as professor, everybody is aware of that they have a physics background.

On the hospital that’s positively not true. Most individuals do not have a physics background. And so communication, and studying to speak science successfully to non-scientists, was actually necessary.

Adam Levy: 19:33

What about, I suppose, these extra smooth abilities if you find yourself interacting, not simply with, with different medical professionals, but additionally with sufferers?

I imply, physicists possibly aren’t essentially so well-known for his or her smooth abilities. And I need to confess, I’m a physicist by coaching as properly.

Jennifer Pursley: 19:51

That’s an excellent level. And it’s one thing that the sector as an entire of medical physics is attempting to determine proper now.

Traditionally, we haven’t had that a lot of a patient-facing function. And if we do work together instantly with the affected person, we principally attempt to not speak to them an excessive amount of. We attempt to let the professionals deal with that.

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However we’re seeing the profit for physicists. Specifically there are some sufferers who’re actually interested in what’s occurring to them, like “What is that this radiation remedy that I’m receiving?”

And the physicians can reply a few of these questions. However I’ve really instantly interacted with sufferers who’re themselves engineers or physicists. And so they wish to speak to a physicist in regards to the linear accelerator and about their remedy.

So it’s positively been a studying expertise. And it’s not one thing that we’re at present coaching physicists to do.

However I believe the medical physics subject as an entire sees that this in all probability goes to be an necessary side of our subject. And we must always begin coaching physicists on the best way to talk higher.

Adam Levy: 21:04

On this collection, we’ve mirrored lots on how to decide on what crew and what lab, one desires to be part of.

How do you assume that query is difficult while you’re additionally interested by altering, altering disciplines and doubtlessly altering disciplines fairly radically?

Jennifer Pursley: 21:21

I believe the toughest a part of it for me was not understanding precisely what I used to be getting myself into.

I keep in mind really, the very first day that I confirmed up, as my medical physics postdoc, I used to be shaking. As a result of I had gone from being an professional in particle physics. Or I walked into CDF at Fermilab and I knew everybody there, I knew what everybody’s job was, I knew precisely who to ask for questions.

And I felt like I had mastered the place I used to be. After which I walked into this utterly new atmosphere, I didn’t know anybody, I didn’t know precisely what I used to be alleged to be doing, and even what I did not know that I wanted to know. And it was an actual shock.

So not understanding what you’re moving into additionally makes it actually laborious to decide on the fitting match for you. The analysis challenge that I labored on as my first challenge, as a medical physicist, it wasn’t actually an excellent match for me.

So it’s notably laborious while you’re switching disciplines to know what’s going to be the very best match for you when it comes to analysis or lab or place.

Adam Levy: 22:31

Out of your experiences do you may have any recommendations on issues individuals ought to ought to be careful for or issues individuals ought to keep away from when they’re making a transition like this?

Jennifer Pursley: 22:40

Properly, my largest recommendation should you’re contemplating a transition between fields is to speak to as many individuals as you’ll be able to.

And I inform this to college students on a regular basis. What I did was I talked to particle physicists I knew who had turn into medical physicists.

However in hindsight, what I ought to have accomplished was attain out to medical physicists close by the place I used to be in Chicago.

I ought to have known as a few of them up or emailed them and requested if I might come and meet them the place they labored, and job shadow them for a day or two, and simply speak to them about their expertise.

And I spotted now that physicists are extraordinarily keen to do that, like they’re really very joyful to speak with college students or people who find themselves contemplating transitioning into their subject, they’re very welcoming.

In order that’s my, like, largest recommendation to individuals contemplating the profession change now could be attain out to a physicist in your space.

Even should you don’t know them, or have a connection to them, it’s extremely possible that they’ll be joyful to welcome you and you will get a fantastic expertise. You may be taught extra from really being within the atmosphere than simply from speaking to somebody about it.

Adam Levy: 23:53

Is there something that you simply miss in any respect in regards to the extra pure physics (I’m placing that within the inverted quotes) that you simply did earlier in your profession?

Jennifer Pursley: 24:03

There positively are some things that I miss about pure physics. Not less than coming from a particle physics background, I used to be used to working with a really massive collaboration of individuals. And all of us supported one another’s analysis work.

So we had a typical set of code, a code repository, that everybody checked code out and in.

And so any developments, any enhancements that anybody made, have been instantly shared with the remainder of the group.

And sadly, in different fields, that is probably not the way in which issues work in analysis.

In order that side, not having the ability to share analysis as freely or as shortly as I used to be used to as a pure scientist, it was a little bit, a little bit bit completely different than I anticipated.

Adam Levy: 24:49

Is there the rest you’d wish to share with individuals who possibly are contemplating a transition not simply from particle physics to medical physics, however from a extra bodily self-discipline to a extra life sciences or medical sciences self-discipline?

Jennifer Pursley: 25:02

Written communication is necessary. Despite the fact that physicists are anticipated to put in writing papers we’re probably not taught the best way to write.

However having some devoted programs in efficient written communication, I believe could be useful for anybody contemplating switching into one thing like a life sciences self-discipline.

Adam Levy: 25:23

That was Jennifer Pursley. We’ve obtained simply two episodes left on this collection, however we nonetheless have lots left to debate.

For one factor, we haven’t touched on the express disadvantages that some researchers face when shifting lab and the way these can complicate what’s an already difficult resolution.

And so within the subsequent episode we’re talking with three researchers with bodily disabilities, about their experiences and approaches.

Till then, this has been Working Scientist, a Nature Careers podcast. Thanks for listening. I am Adam Levy.

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