I have a very unusual question, and I am hoping to get some advice from you fellow SDNers (my $40,000 a year university, of course, has people marginally more qualified than chimpanzees doing the advising).
I want to list as much research on my application as possible. I am working on a health policy thesis right now, which I am passionate about, and I would love to continue doing this kind of research in medical school; however, it is incomplete, and thus I cannot list it on AMCAS. As it stands, the only research I am listing on my application is a 3-month-long summer research program I did after Freshman year when I was an astrophysics major; I got a publication, but still, that shows minimal commitment.
Here's the conundrum: I actually did 5-6 months of research in (what I thought was going to be) a neurobiology lab earlier this year. However, the research turned out to be more psych/behavioral research, which doesn't interest me. Also, the professor was senile and inept at dealing with people (even by professor standards); as such, the lab was going nowhere, since he could neither attract nor hold down any post docs or grad students to work in his lab. Furthermore, he openly insulted all of the students, including myself, for no reason whatsoever. I figured that I have a publication already, found the work uninteresting and I have M3, M4, and all of residency to get pooped on by superiors, so I quit. Should I list this experience on my AMCAS? Even though it was meaningless and ended poorly, it is still research experience. As an aside, I did quit after winter quarter (my school is on quarters), so I did not quit at a suspicious time in the process. However, it would probably look weird that I did not seek a recommendation from the PI; since I obviously cannot write on the AMCAS that he was impossible to work with, this will look sketchy.
If I listed it, I wouldn't want to list the professor as the contact; although there were no graduate students as I mentioned before, there was an undergraduate who was the "lab coordinator" who is very personable and has a high opinion of me. Could I list her as a contact, or would the fact that she is an undergraduate make that a poor choice?
I would greatly appreciate anyone's help on this matter. If you want, feel free to PM me.
--WaryWildcat