Often these people were
scientists of a different sort, a kind I would not encounter in the lab: working in administration, or development, or communications.
Not exact matches
Eager to
sort through the pile
of curriculum vitae's on his desk, Rudnicki is particularly looking for molecular geneticists working on
different stem cell systems;
scientists with genomics bents like proteomics, microarray analysis, and bioinformatics; and a couple
of clinician
scientists.
«In machine translation, historically, there was
sort of a pyramid with
different layers,» says Jim Glass, a CSAIL senior research
scientist who worked on the project with Yonatan Belinkov, an MIT graduate student in electrical engineering and computer science.
Forensic
scientists have to painstakingly
sort through photos
of different types
of shoes, boots and trainer prints.
«Ceres is so big compared to all the other asteroids that it's really
different,» said Andrew Rivkin, a planetary
scientist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Md. «It's
sort of the penultimate step before a planet.»
In a paper that June,
scientists demonstrated how it might be possible to efficiently edit genes — that is, how to snip DNA at a particular spot and insert
different DNA, a
sort of biological version
of word processing's «find and replace.»
And I'd love to see the various
scientists who specialize in
different bits
of this puzzle suggest to one another what
sort of thing they might look for in their own areas.