250 likes | 369 Views
OBJECTIVES. Provide tips/advice on:Approaching principle investigators (PI)Applying to summer research programsCaveat:There is no single right way to do thisYour "mileage" may vary. ABOUT ME. Presented at multiple national and international conferencesMentored over 100 undergraduates in labo
E N D
1. THE INTANGIBLES OF UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH Jason H. Haga, Ph.D.
Department of Bioengineering
Institute for Engineering in Medicine
2. OBJECTIVES Provide tips/advice on:
Approaching principle investigators (PI)
Applying to summer research programs
Caveat:
There is no single right way to do this
Your "mileage" may vary
3. ABOUT ME Presented at multiple national and international conferences
Mentored over 100 undergraduates in laboratory research
Currently a mentor for AMGEN, RSRI, and PRIME
Performed undergraduate research at UCSD
4. APPROACHING PIS How to Network at a Conference
5. SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCES Experimental Biology (EB)
American Heart Association (AHA)
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Biomedical Engineering Society (BMES)
International Society of Thrombosis and Haemostasis (ISTH)
UCSD Summer Research Conference
6. WHAT IS A CONFERENCE? A scientific conference is a venue where scientists can come together to present results and exchange ideas
Attendance varies (100 to over 30,000 people)
Usually include presentations, posters, workgroups, and industry exhibits
Some type of social program
10. APPROACHING SCIENTISTS Assess the situation and react appropriately (formal, casual, party)
The best start is often the science and all scientists like to talk about their work
Address the scientist appropriately
Dr. not Mr.
Introduce yourself with your name, lab and where you work
Speak clearly and use eye contact
Good opening: I really enjoyed your presentation on
"
"Please explain your poster
"
11. THE CONVERSATION Pay attention and be a good listener
Ask questions for clarification
Some effort may be needed to get a word in
Contribute something to the conversation
Try to make specific comments about the work
Do not try to show off
Share ideas
Use discretion
Word any criticisms carefully
12. KEEPING IN TOUCH Follow-up after meeting people: email, phone, card, send info
Strengthen relationships with people you meet - suggest another meeting
Remember people you meet and the work they do
Some connections take effort or be impossible to develop
Personalities of people vary widely from nice to real jerks
13. APPLYING TO SUMMER PROGRAMS
14. GENERAL APPLICATION TIPS When choosing a program consider:
What type of research interests you?
What are you prepared to do?
What are your long term goals?
How does your personality fit the lab/work atmosphere?
Spelling
Dr. not Mr.
Ask professors for letter of recommendation
Similar to approaching them at a conference
Include resume/curriculum vitae, personal statement, proposal, etc.
15. HOW TO WRITE A RESEARCH PROPOSAL? Research is "investigation or experimentation aimed at the discovery and interpretation of facts, revision of accepted theories or laws in the light of new facts, or practical application of such new or revised theories or laws" (Merriam-Webster Online, 2011).
Research discovers something new
It is an "organic process" that evolves with each finding
16. PROPOSAL FORMAT Lab report format
Title
Introduction (hypothesis/goal/purpose)
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Include a timeline of objectives to be accomplished
17. THE PROCESS Review relevant references
Start writing blank page is most difficult
Use scientific language
ex: "After giving the drug, we saw that blood pressure went down."
vs: "After administration of the drug, it was observed that blood pressure decreased."
Hypothesis generation takes practice
Potential results/problems
Potential conclusions i.e. what does this research contribute
Send to mentor for review and suggestions
18. DURING THE RESEARCH Understand the long term goals of the project
Ask questions
Be sure you understand what is asked of you
Take notes and pay attention to them
Leave everything in the lab (lab notebooks, reagents)
Time management
Use wait time to update your records, read papers, or prep for another experiment
Plan/organize your research and extracurricular activities
Research is a team effort (respect and recognize others)
19. COMPLETING THE PROGRAM Summarize your work in written and oral forms
Lab report format
Helpful for applying to graduate schools or jobs
Leave information and reagents in good order
Recognize that there is no guarantee that your work will be published, but the learning experience is invaluable
20. EXPECTATIONS
21. MENTOR EXPECTATIONS Intellectual interest
Prepare
Contact your assigned mentor
Read background material on the project
Perform
Strive to make each experiment the best one
Complete the program and all requirements
Do not accept a position if you cannot commit 100%
Present
Summarize your work in a short paper/poster/presentation
22. MENTEE EXPECTATIONS Research is difficult
Frequent communication with your mentor and program director
Extensive training and explanation
Prevents equipment breaking
Facilitates performance of assays
No question is a dumb question
Learn something
23. CAN I DO THIS? Christopher Lau PRIME 2009 alumni
Visualization of Virtual Screening Results on Tiled Display Walls: ViewDock TDW
Published in Bioinformatics, 2010
Website and links at UCSF
Presented at EB 2010
24. A BETTER QUESTION
What can I contribute to the body of scientific information that is out there?
25. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Dr. Peter Arzberger
Dr. Shu Chien
All of my undergraduates
26. LINKS Academic Enrichment Programs, UCSD
aep.ucsd.edu
Undergraduate Research, UCSD
ugresearch.ucsd.edu
Viewdock TDW
www.tdw-prime.webs.com
PRIME
prime.ucsd.edu
Amgen
aep.ucsd.edu/amgen