City
Epaper

New study finds career barriers for young scientists embracing interdisciplinary research

By IANS | Updated: July 30, 2024 14:40 IST

New Delhi, July 30 Young scientists, who engage in interdisciplinary research in biomedicine, face significant career impediments compared ...

Open in App

New Delhi, July 30 Young scientists, who engage in interdisciplinary research in biomedicine, face significant career impediments compared to their peers who focus solely on their discipline.

A recent study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reveals that the research, led by Professor Bruce Weinberg from The Ohio State University, analysed data on 154,021 biomedical PhD graduates and over 2.6 million research papers.

The study found that young interdisciplinary researchers tend to stop publishing earlier in their careers, with half of the most interdisciplinary (top 1 per cent) ceasing publication by the eighth year, compared to over 20 years for moderately interdisciplinary researchers (10-75 per cent range).

"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 Weinberg.

The study highlighted the importance of integrating knowledge across various disciplines, including biology, physics, chemistry, computer science, engineering, and social science, to address complex biomedical challenges such as food sustainability, ageing, and disease treatment.

However, despite universities encouraging interdisciplinarity, long-standing academic structures focused on individual disciplines may hinder early-career researchers with broad interests.

Interestingly, the study noted that while young researchers initially decrease their interdisciplinary work over time, interdisciplinarity increases as researchers' careers progress. This suggests that established scientists may have more freedom to explore diverse fields.

"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 emphasised.

The study calls for academic institutions to reconsider how they support interdisciplinary research, particularly for emerging scientists.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketMaharaja Trophy: Bengaluru Blasters snap Mangaluru Dragons' undefeated run as Chethan shines in three-wicket win

International90 Tibetan children's paintings displayed in Dharamshala restaurants to celebrate Dalai Lama's 90th birthday

HockeyBihar to host 12th Men's Asia Cup at Rajgir Hockey Stadium; CM Nitish Kumar unveils mascot and trophy

InternationalEuropean leaders, Zelensky to meet Trump in Washington

InternationalEgypt, Iran condemn Israeli plans to relocate Palestinians

Health Realted Stories

HealthBangladesh: One more person dies of dengue, 2025 toll rises to 105

HealthPrevention, not just medication, key to tackling obesity and diabetes: Jitendra Singh

HealthAyush seminar to boost ayurveda‑based paediatric healthcare

HealthIIT Kharagpur launches healthcare and technology school to train youth as health professionals

HealthNovel live type 1, 3 oral polio vaccines show promise in phase 1 trial