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#1 |
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Senior Member
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I wonder whether his research focus on genetics and cell differentiation are relevant to major dental research areas. I am interested in DMD PHD program.
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#2 | |
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Senior Member
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Apply to Michigan
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#3 |
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Senior Member
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This makes me laugh because I did years of research and work in wildlife conservation (conservation genetics specifically), which is obviously not related to dentistry, and I'm going to Michigan.
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#4 |
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Senior Member
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I understand that doing research in any area is fine when applying to dental school. but I am interested in doing DMD PHD or specialty and would like to work on an area relevant to these routes. For example, the major research topics of UMich's DMD PHD program are tissue engineering, regeneration focused on restoration of oral-cranialfocal tissue. I wonder how my research at NIH heavily involved in genetics and bioinformatics would be helpful toward these areas.
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#5 | ||
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Senior Member
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Sorry I misunderstood your question. You can email some research based dental schools and ask them. These people are the best to answer your question. |
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#6 | |
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my masters was in demethylases in mammalian cell differentiation i definitely talked about it in my interviews and hope to use this information should i research during dental school, it has inferences in dental stem cell research for sure |
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#7 |
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#8 |
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Jedi Master
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Hey guys, I think research is relevant in any subject. I researched biomechanics and renal stem cells, and now I'm going to pursue a DMD/MS in craniofacial regeneration! Many fields are overlapping now, and biology is definitely integrative. I never thought bioengineering (what my job is in) would be relevant to dentistry until I learned about tissue regeneration and scaffolding.
The skills you learn in research is also analogous to patient treatment. In research, you have to take the information you know already, propose a methodology, synthesize the results, and draw conclusions or future directions. In patient treatment, you have to diagnose the patient, prepare a course of action, assess the final results, and give a prognosis. |
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#9 |
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Senior Member
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I am involved in synthetic Organic chemistry research and love it, what d schools are big on research? A DMD/ Phd sounds awesome!
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#10 |
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I can probably chime in here. I'm going to UMich for their DDS/PhD program. In terms of research experience, I have a summers worth of dental-related research experience involving oral/IV bisphosphonates effect on osteonecrosis of the jaw at UCSF, 1 year honors research with a molecular and cellular biology lab involving nuclear transportation of proteins in C. elegans at UCDavis, and 1.5 year as a junior specialist in charge of developing protocols to make recombinant monoclonal antibodies for NeuroMab. Any research is fine, but pursuing a DDS/PhD program requires the applicants to have extensive research because those that have done it before know how much BS is involved and why some experiments fail/succeed is sometimes all luck. Any research is fine but I think it's up to you to make it worthwhile. Research as an undergraduate will help, but these programs are looking for people with lots of experience since it's a very long road to travel.
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#11 | |
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Senior Member
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But what happens when you get rejected from DDS PHD? Could I be reconsidered as a DDS only applicant?? I see that you were a cali resident but was rejected from UCSF DDS PHD but still got into Mich DDS PHD despite being an out of state student. (btw this is amazing!!) I am also very interested in going into academia and specialty without doing Ph.D. |
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#12 | |
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#13 | |
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#14 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: 洛杉矶
Posts: 708
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if you want to do research in the 80/20 ratio, you will need a phd. if you dont really want to do research, you do not need a phd.
you should really only be getting a phd if you plan on being a PI. it woudl just be a waste if you dont want to |
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#17 | |
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Senior Member
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I worked as a pharm tech for 6 months and absolutely hated it. Plus my mother is a pharmacist and she hates it. The only thing I liked about it was helping patients. In addition, my pharmacology research is heavily basic and is focused on enzyme kinetics and solving active site structure, and these topics are irrelevant to pharmacy. Last edited by libraryismyhome; 04-26-2012 at 06:48 PM. |
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#18 |
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New Member
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I sure hope you get somewhere. You're impressive.
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