PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Young scientists face career hurdles in interdisciplinary research

National study: Incentives needed to encourage work on society’s big problems

2024-07-29
(Press-News.org) COLUMBUS, Ohio – Scientists agree that solving some of society’s greatest challenges in biomedicine such as food sustainability, aging and disease treatment will need researchers from a variety of scientific fields working together.

But a new study finds that the young scientists who most embrace interdisciplinary research face “career impediments” not seen in their peers who focus their work only within their own disciplines.

The results are troublesome and pose a “grave challenge” to efforts to increase interdisciplinary research, the authors of the new study write.

“As an economist, you would think that the most interdisciplinary young researchers would get the most rewards, because that is the type of research that is seen as most valuable. But that doesn’t appear to be the case,” said Bruce Weinberg, co-author of the study and professor of economics at The Ohio State University.

The study was published today (July 29, 2024) in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Interdisciplinary research in biomedicine involves integrating knowledge from different subfields of biology, and brings in expertise from other disciplines, including physics, chemistry, computer science, engineering and social science.

For example, one recent study on how people’s thoughts can harm their neck and back during lifting tasks included researchers from engineering, anesthesiology and orthopedics.

In this new study, Weinberg and his colleagues analyzed data on 154,021 researchers who received a PhD in a biomedical field between 1970 and 2013. A second sample included data on more than 2.6 million research papers published between 1970 and 2018.

One goal was to compare the careers of researchers who focused on interdisciplinary research while they were graduate students and early in their careers with those who mostly stuck to research within their discipline.

Researchers who were initially the most interdisciplinary tended to stop publishing new research earlier in their careers. While half of the most interdisciplinary researchers (top 1%) stopped publishing by the eighth year of their careers, it took more than 20 years for moderately interdisciplinary researchers (in the 10-75% range) to do the same.

Perhaps in response to career pressures, initially interdisciplinary researchers on average decreased their research that spanned different fields over time, findings showed.

This study can’t say why these concerning trends are happening, Weinberg said. Universities know the importance of interdisciplinarity and indeed encourage it in many ways, including creating centers that revolve around research in many disciplines. But long-standing academic structures that are built around individual disciplines may hold back early-career researchers with more wide-ranging interests, he said.

It is an issue that is solvable and that universities are interested in fixing, he said. It is a matter of redesigning systems that have been in place for many years.

Still, there were some encouraging findings in this study.

“We found that interdisciplinarity does increase over time despite these challenges,” Weinberg said.

“It turns out that researchers who were originally focused mostly on research just in their disciplines do become more interdisciplinary as their careers progress.”

It may be that once researchers’ careers are established, they have the freedom to explore other fields and begin to work more outside their discipline.

“But we are missing an opportunity by not encouraging the bright young minds who are already interested in working with scientists in other fields to solve society’s most difficult problems,” Weinberg said.

“We need to provide more incentives for these young researchers.”

Co-authors on the study were Enrico Berkes, a former postdoctoral researcher at Ohio State, now an assistant professor of economics at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County; and Monica Marion and Stasa Miljevic of Indiana University.

#

Contact: Bruce Weinberg, Weinberg.27@osu.edu

Written by Jeff Grabmeier, 614-292-8457; Grabmeier.1@osu.edu

 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New progress in research into malignant catarrhal fever in cattle

New progress in research into malignant catarrhal fever in cattle
2024-07-29
A research team led by University of Liège scientists has published a groundbreaking study on malignant catarrhal fever (MCF). This disease is caused by the alcelaphine gammaherpesvirus 1 (AlHV-1), which infects its natural host, the wildebeest.  This study sheds light on the mechanisms by which this virus, which is asymptomatic and latent in the wildebeest, causes an oligoclonal expansion of CD8+ T lymphocytes in cattle, leading to the development of MCF. In 2013, the research team had already demonstrated (1) that malignant catarrhal fever (MCF), which is fatal in cattle, only develops if the AlHV-1 virus can maintain a ...

Words like ‘this’ and ‘that’ act as attention tools across languages

Words like ‘this’ and ‘that’ act as attention tools across languages
2024-07-29
All languages have words like ‘this’ and ‘that’ to distinguish between referents that are ‘near’ and ‘far’. Languages like English or Hebrew have two of these ‘demonstratives’. Languages like Spanish or Japanese use a three-word system. For instance, in Spanish, ‘este’ signals something close to the speaker, ‘ese’ signals something far from the speaker but close to the listener, and ‘aquel’ signals something far from both. “The reason why we were interested in demonstratives is because of their ...

Local food production saves costs and carbon

Local food production saves costs and carbon
2024-07-29
Local foods are critical to the food security and health of Indigenous peoples around the world, but local "informal" economies are often invisible in official economic statistics. Consequently, these economies may be overlooked in the policies designed to combat climate change. For instance, Indigenous communities in the North American Arctic are characterized by mixed economies featuring hunting, fishing, gathering and trapping activities, alongside the formal wage economy. The region is also undergoing a rapid transformation due to social, economic and climatic changes. In Canada, the introduction ...

Bold moves needed for California agriculture to adapt to climate change

Bold moves needed for California agriculture to adapt to climate change
2024-07-29
California should take urgent and bold measures to adapt its $59 billion agriculture sector to climate change as the amount of water available for crops declines, according to a collaborative report by University of California faculty from four campuses. Published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the report provides a roadmap for more water capture, storage, and distribution systems that are in harmony with climate projections and ecosystems. It further considers how runoff and groundwater can be used repeatedly ...

To get drivers to put down their phones, make it a game

2024-07-29
If you’re trying to keep drivers from picking up their phones, make it a game, according to a new Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) study led by researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. When drivers could earn points for making reductions in handheld phone use and had the chance to compete in a weekly leaderboard of others like them, researchers saw as much as a 28 percent reduction in handheld phone use while driving, a habit that stuck once the intervention—and the games—ended. “Distracted driving ...

Study identifies protein that affects health of gut microbiota and response to bacterial infection

2024-07-29
A study reported in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) shows how the presence of a specific protein called IL-22BP affects the composition of the gut microbiota and the body’s response to bacterial infection. “We discovered that mice that don’t produce this protein are more protected against intestinal infections by bacteria like Clostridioides difficile and Citrobacter rodentium,” Marco Aurélio Ramirez Vinolo, a co-author of the article, told. He is a professor at the State University of Campinas’s Institute of Biology (IB-UNICAMP) in Brazil and head of its Immunoinflammation Laboratory. IL-22BP ...

Fetal brain impacted when mom fights severe flu: New mouse study explains how

Fetal brain impacted when mom fights severe flu: New mouse study explains how
2024-07-29
URBANA, Ill. -- A bad case of the flu during pregnancy can increase the risk for fetal neurodevelopmental disorders such as schizophrenia and autism spectrum disorder. But it’s not the virus itself doing the damage; it’s the mother’s immune response.  New University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign research using live mouse-adapted influenza virus improves upon previous mouse experiments to explain the process on a cellular and molecular level. It also indicates fetal brain changes are more likely once the severity of the mother’s infection meets a specific threshold. “Our data provide really compelling evidence for an infection severity ...

A camera trap for the invisible

A camera trap for the invisible
2024-07-29
DURHAM, N.C. -- It sounds fantastical, but it’s a reality for the scientists who work at the world’s largest particle collider: In an underground tunnel some 350 feet beneath the France–Switzerland border, a huge device called the Large Hadron Collider sends beams of protons smashing into each other at nearly the speed of light, creating tiny eruptions that mimic the conditions that existed immediately after the Big Bang. Scientists like Duke physicist Ashutosh Kotwal think the subatomic debris of these collisions could contain hints ...

Neurodivergent children are twice as likely to experience chronic disabling fatigue in adolescence

2024-07-29
The research, led by Dr Lisa Quadt, Research Fellow in Psychiatry at BSMS and Dr Jessica Eccles, Reader in Brain-Body Medicine at BSMS, highlights a significant link between neurodivergence and chronic fatigue. The study found that increased inflammation in childhood, often resulting from heightened stress levels, may be a contributing factor. This supports previous findings that suggest chronic fatigue can be rooted in inflammatory processes. “These results show the importance of trans-diagnostic screening for children and the need for better support for neurodivergent children” says Dr Quadt. “Children with neurodivergent ...

Engineers use data to manage grid transformers, boosting reliability to homes, farms

Engineers use data to manage grid transformers, boosting reliability to homes, farms
2024-07-29
AMES, Iowa – Pay attention the next time you drive near your home, farm or business. You’ll notice small, green utility boxes all over the place. They’re distribution transformers. If they’re not working properly, electricity won’t flow to your lights and appliances.   Those boxes take kilovolts of electricity (that’s high voltage, measured in 1,000s of volts) from transmission lines and step it down to the safer, practical 120 or 240 volts that power our daily lives.   “Utilities have plenty of them,” said Zhaoyu Wang, an Iowa State University professor of electrical and computer engineering. “Most of them only ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New fully digital design paves the way for scalable probabilistic computing

Membrane electrode assembly design for high-efficiency anion exchange membrane water electrolysis

U.S. debt ceiling disputes show measurable impact on global crude oil markets

Climate extremes triggered rare coral disease and mass mortality on the Great Barrier Reef

Direct observation reveals “two-in-one” roles of plasma turbulence

Humans rank between meerkats and beavers in monogamy ‘league table’

US fossil reveals early mass-burial event and ancient microbial attack

Sedative choice could improve outcomes for breathing tube patients

New superconducting thin film for quantum computer chips

Simulations reveal protein "dynamin" constricts cell membranes by loosening its grip

Nearly 1 in 5 UK emergency department patients cared for in corridors/waiting rooms

Heavy energy drink intake may pose serious stroke risk, doctors warn

Violence against women and children among top health threats: New global study reveals disease burden far larger than previously estimated

Predicting who is at risk of developing type 1 diabetes, as new drugs now available

New gene-mapping method unlocks hidden drivers of cancer

Ocean current and seabed shape influence warm water circulation under ice shelves

Call to increase funding for ‘invisible’ Deaf victim-survivors of domestic abuse

University of Maryland School of Medicine names distinguished scientist and academic leader Gerald M. Wilson, PhD, as Chair of the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Receptors in mammary glands make livestock and humans inviting hosts for avian flu

Icy hot plasmas

Treating adults with autism: Maryland Clinical Center offers national blueprint for care after pediatric transition

University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies releases white paper on reclaiming control to build workforce resilience

NCCN Summit seeks to improve care for veterans and first responders with cancer from line-of-duty exposure

ERC Consolidator Grant for soft robotics researcher

Dual-action arts and wellbeing program transforms dementia care

The global plastic waste trade contributes to coastal litter in importing countries, study shows

UT Dallas partners with Tech Mahindra on AI innovation

Blinking less could signal the brain is working harder to listen, Concordia study shows

Male bonobos track females’ reproductive cycle to maximize mating success

New report outlines science priorities for human Mars exploration

[Press-News.org] Young scientists face career hurdles in interdisciplinary research
National study: Incentives needed to encourage work on society’s big problems