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- Sep 20, 2017
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Weird scenario, but I worked as a scut man in a biochem lab during undergrad for 2 years. During those 2 years I built a solution repeatedly (lets call it solution X) that the professor needed for his ultimate creation of compound Y. During my 2 years there, he was never able to create compound Y.
He then finally created the compound (compound Y) and published the article a couple years after I had graduated and left. He did this with the exact same solution X I was making beforehand, only with new scuts. My solution X was no different vs the solution X used in the publication. Of note, none of the new scuts were listed either, just other professors and grad students.
Is this something that could be listed on my ERAS application under publications? Thanks.
He then finally created the compound (compound Y) and published the article a couple years after I had graduated and left. He did this with the exact same solution X I was making beforehand, only with new scuts. My solution X was no different vs the solution X used in the publication. Of note, none of the new scuts were listed either, just other professors and grad students.
Is this something that could be listed on my ERAS application under publications? Thanks.