Friday feelings: the importance of communication

I don’t want to get into too many specifics here, but this week was a lesson in the importance of communication.  Science is a collaborative process, the days of one person making discoveries have long since passed, and everything we do these days requires not just a team but multiple teams working in tandem.  With that comes a requirement for all teams to be on the same page so they can work together instead of going in circles.  My team recently received a sample to test but has no idea what the sample is or how it was produced.  Without this knowledge, how can we know what is in the sample?  If I see something odd in the sample, how can I know whether it’s important and must be removed or whether it’s a normal and expected part of the process?  And importantly, how can we replicate this work in our own lab if we don’t know how it was produced in the other lab?

Collaboration is of course difficult, we all have our own things to do any communicating to our collaborators sometimes only helps them and not us, so we don’t want to spend energy on it.  Still it’s necessary if a collaboration is going to work and collaboration is a thing that helps all of us. 

Just as important to collaborative communication is scientific communication to the wider community, usually through papers.  I’ve recently thought that scientific journals should also increase the standards to which they hold paper writers, too many will publish inscriptible images and vague methods that cannot be replicated at all, with your best bet in this case is usually the arduous process of calling the original scientist on the phone and asking him or her what the hell they did.  It’s like if you read a recipe and all it said was “cook it until it’s finished.”  What the hell does that even mean?  If you read a paper and you don’t know how the method was done, how can you ever build off that paper?  I’m not trying to accuse people of scientific misconduct or anything, I’m just trying to say that if I have no idea what you did, I’m not going to cite your paper or use it for my own research.  Good communication is important.

Leave a comment