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How long did you stay in your lab to get your name on a publication? Whether it is first author or lesser authors. Psych researchers GTFO(jk jk)
Wow congrats dood. Can I ask how did you find the clinical research position(I assume what it is). I never thought outside of the basic science and psych labs at my school. Would like to know more about it.I have been working full-time in a pediatric neurosurgical lab since Feb 2020 (but I was on furlough for 3 months due to COVID) and my first pub is being submitted this week! I think I am 4th author after my PIs and 2 surgeons who actually performed the surgeries
Jesus I really never considered clinical research at all before this thread. How do you find clinical research labs? I'd really like to get into it if I can.Here's N = 1 from a clincal research lab. It took me less than 6 months to achieve two co-authorships. It took me three-and-a-half years to write two manuscripts and listed as the first author for both. They will be both published in November this year, which coincidentally marks my 4th year anniversary since I joined the lab.
In general, first authorship is harder and more prestigious than co-authorships. Also, you will have plenty of things to talk about during interviews, if offered.
Do you think it's your undergrad lab? The lab I'm part of the professor makes sure everyone gets their name in at least one lesser author.Basic science researcher for 5 years and only 1 pub so far and 1 more in the works. I also did lots of basic science research as an undergrad (all 4 years) and never got a pub.
It varies from lab to lab, of course. I also had a different mentor in lab every year until my last year when I had my own project and wrote a thesis on it. As an undergrad I wasn't looking for pubs and more to learn how to do science, so I when searching for a lab I made sure to find good mentoring.Do you think it's your undergrad lab? The lab I'm part of the professor makes sure everyone gets their name in at least one lesser author.
It varies from lab to lab, of course. I also had a different mentor in lab every year until my last year when I had my own project and wrote a thesis on it. As an undergrad I wasn't looking for pubs and more to learn how to do science, so I when searching for a lab I made sure to find good mentoring.
In my current lab, as a graduate student, my PI is very strict on who gets authorship. Even though most people leave with 1 publication, they are the primary author of that publication and it is usually a single authorship or 2-3 other author, PI included.
And for the record, as far as medical school, graduate school, or literally anything that puts high value on publications, being first author on something is manipulatively more valuable than being an author. I'm not saying that authorship in any position is bad - far from it -, but it should be noted that having a first author on anything is much better. For example, my poster on which I am first author was likely viewed more favorably than my publication on which I am third author.
Being first author on some sort of media shows your critical ability: to design, to test, to rethink strategies, and so on. The first position on any project is always reserved for those who know how to actually do whatever it is that you did.
In one of the labs I interviewed at the PI told me I just have to do one experiment to get my name in the publication. I wanted to be mentored so I chose not to join that lab. Still searching now lmaoI know for graduate admissions they view posters (assuming 1st author of course) more favorable than most publications if they are not 1st author. Getting authorship as an undergrad on a paper is honestly a lot of luck. You could be doing a summer research project for a postdoc or senior graduate student about to finish and all you do is run a couple gels, image analysis, etc, and you get authorship. I have talked to undergrads with authorships and they could barely tell me about their project, their involvement, methods, etc., because they were barely involved with the critical thinking aspect of the research.
Also don't get blinded by Science,Nature, or Cell publications, of course getting one is an achievement that few obtain, much less undergrads. If you have the opportunity to be actively involved in a publication then do your best to understand your project, the hypothesis, methods, impact of the field, etc.
I've seen someone with just a lesser authorship got into a T20 MD/PHD. First author is cool but I don't think it's necessary.And for the record, as far as medical school, graduate school, or literally anything that puts high value on publications are concerned, being first author on something is manipulatively more valuable than being an author. I'm not saying that authorship in any position is bad - far from it -, but it should be noted that having a first author on anything is much better than, necessarily, an any authorship position paper. For example, my poster on which I am first author was likely viewed more favorably than my publication on which I am third author.
Being first author on some sort of media shows your critical ability: to design, to test, to rethink strategies, and so on. The first position on any project is always reserved for those who know how to actually do whatever it is that you did.
Not at all.I've seen someone with just a lesser authorship got into a T20 MD/PHD. First author is cool but I don't think it's necessary.
I’m not sure about the idea that a first author poster is better than a third author article (assuming it’s in a legitimate journal). I was so genuinely confused by that type of comment here that I asked a physician colleague (very well-established researcher and faculty at strong state medical school and a former fellowship PD) if posters and publications had different relative value in medicine. Her response was that publications are still leagues harder to get than posters, carry much more weight, and are viewed more favorably (provided that you can prove that you understand the project, of course, but that goes for any research).
I've seen someone with just a lesser authorship got into a T20 MD/PHD. First author is cool but I don't think it's necessary.
so I when searching for a lab I made sure to find good mentoring
If your school has a medical school or medical center, start applying for research labs there. Also, the definition of clinical research is very broad --> Could be a translational research lab, or clinical trial lab, or both (my lab).Jesus I really never considered clinical research at all before this thread. How do you find clinical research labs? I'd really like to get into it if I can.
Source on this? It contradicts everything I've seen, read, and know from my own experience as a professor.Absolutely not necessary.
I just said it’s viewed more favorably. And I don’t mean first authorship on a paper, I’m talking oral presentations, abstracts, and posters. A first author on any of those is often found to be superior to a lesser author publication.
Source on this? It contradicts everything I've seen, read, and know from my own experience as a professor.
To a degree. If you're publishing in predatory, pay-to-publish outlets, that's going to potentially backfire.Once you're in med school, quantity >>> quality for residencies.