共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 187 毫秒
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Carolyn J. Lawrence-Dill Robyn L. Allscheid Albert Boaitey Todd Bauman Edward S. Buckler IV Jennifer L. Clarke Christopher Cullis Jack Dekkers Cassandra J. Dorius Shawn F. Dorius David Ertl Matthew Homann Guiping Hu Mary Losch Eric Lyons Brenda Murdoch Zahra-Katy Navabi Somashekhar Punnuri Fahad Rafiq James M. Reecy Patrick S. Schnable Nicole M. Scott Moira Sheehan Xavier Sirault Margaret Staton Christopher K. Tuggle Alison Van Eenennaam Rachael Voas 《PLoS computational biology》2022,18(4)
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Whitney M. Woelmer L. M. Bradley Lisa T. Haber David H. Klinges Abigail S. L. Lewis Elizabeth J. Mohr Christa L. Torrens Kathryn I. Wheeler Alyssa M. Willson 《PLoS computational biology》2021,17(10)
The opportunity to participate in and contribute to emerging fields is increasingly prevalent in science. However, simply thinking about stepping outside of your academic silo can leave many students reeling from the uncertainty. Here, we describe 10 simple rules to successfully train yourself in an emerging field, based on our experience as students in the emerging field of ecological forecasting. Our advice begins with setting and revisiting specific goals to achieve your academic and career objectives and includes several useful rules for engaging with and contributing to an emerging field. 相似文献
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Melanie Duc Bo Massey Suchinta Arif Shanukie Embuldeniya Karma Nanglu Joseph Bielawski 《PLoS computational biology》2022,18(6)
Undergraduate students from underrepresented backgrounds (e.g., Black, Indigenous, and people of color [BIPOC], members of the Deaf community, people with disabilities, members of the 2SLGBTQIA+ community, from low-income backgrounds, or underrepresented genders) continue to face exclusion and marginalization in higher education. In this piece, authored and edited by a diverse group of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) scholars, we present 10 simple rules for succeeding as an underrepresented STEM undergraduate student, illuminating the “hidden curriculum” of STEM specifically as it relates to the underrepresented undergraduate experience. Our rules begin by encouraging students to embrace their own distinct identities and scientific voices and explain how students can overcome challenges unique to underrepresented students throughout their undergraduate degrees. These rules are derived from a combination of our own experiences navigating our undergraduate STEM degrees and the growing body of literature on improving success for underrepresented students. 相似文献
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Valentin Guignon Catherine Breton Jrme Mariette Franois Sabot Julien Fumey Vincent Lefort Anna-Sophie Fiston-Lavier 《PLoS computational biology》2021,17(10)
In 2020, the world faced the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic that drastically altered people’s lives. Since then, many countries have been forced to suspend public gatherings, leading to many conference cancellations, postponements, or reorganizations. Switching from a face-to-face to a remote conference became inevitable and the ultimate solution to sustain scientific exchanges at the national and the international levels. The same year, as a committee, we were in charge of organizing the major French annual conference that covers all computational biology areas: The “Journées Ouvertes en Biologie, Informatique et Mathématiques” (JOBIM). Despite the health crisis, we succeeded in changing the conference format from face to face to remote in a very short amount of time. Here, we propose 10 simple rules based on this experience to modify a conference format in an optimized and cost-effective way. In addition to the suggested rules, we decided to emphasize an unexpected benefit of this situation: a significant reduction in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions related to travel for scientific conference attendance. We believe that even once the SARS-CoV-2 crisis is over, we collectively will have an opportunity to think about the way we approach such scientific events over the longer term. 相似文献
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