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drstrangelove said:is non-related research almost the same as no research?
tigershark said:You're not gonna have time to get a first-author basic science manuscript between first and second year. You'll have to stick with it in your free time during 2nd and 3rd year.
Basic science papers > clinical papers, by a long shot. The standard of publication for basic science is much higher than for clinical research.
drstrangelove said:So if you want to do research, you can start the summer after first year but you really need to keep doing it throughout 2nd and 3rd year.
This begs the question: is doing one summer of research even worth doing?
drstrangelove said:If you don't figure out what you want to specialize in until 3rd year, is there opportunity for pursuing related research then?
TheRussian said:I don't know how flexible your school is about this sort of thing but at my school people that want to go into very competitive specialties often will split their fourth year and do research to improve their application. So if you figure out what you want to do 3rd year then there is still time.
As for being first author in basic science... I sincerly doubt that even half of the people applying for competitive specialties have first authored a paper. The Neurology residency director said that first author is not necessary and that even case studies would put you in a good position. Also straight from the mouth of our director of surgery residency "I am looking for clinical research. I don't care if you can mix a protein in a lab. I want someone that has done relevant research."
drstrangelove said:Is 4th year too late to do research before for the match/app/interview process? When does this occur?
When would you author a case report? Any time during 3rd year?
Which surgery director is that? It's curious that everyone else seems to say the opposite. Is that view representative nationally?