What Is The Best Place In The World To Do Bioinformatics?
6
7
Entering edit mode
14.8 years ago
Manuel Corpas ▴ 650

I guess the best place would need to:

  • Have a critical mass of scientists
  • Be a world leading site for its reputation in science
  • Have well known projects
  • Good facilties
  • Good pay/Well funded
  • Leading Technology Provider
education subjective • 14k views
ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode

you don't need to 'community wiki' all your questions: I suggest you to accumulate some points, unless you can at least vote, and then we will change to community wiki all the questions that deserve it here.

ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode

yes, good point, community wiki will turn on automatically after some time.

ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode

thanks for your suggestions... Still learning.

ADD REPLY
5
Entering edit mode
14.8 years ago

From a UK perspective, Cambridge has to be up there. I'm pretty sure it ticks all of your points, and you can't get much better for density of bioinformaticians than the Genome Campus in Hinxton.

ADD COMMENT
1
Entering edit mode

I'm even tempted to say that the EBI is one of the most interesting places from even a EU perspective. Particularly, if you value the ODOSOS ideas.

ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode

My preference goes to EBI ans Sanger institute

ADD REPLY
5
Entering edit mode
14.8 years ago

One annecdota: when I was looking for a place to start a phd, the first of my criterias to determine where I liked or not a place was the position of the monitors.

I think that at least 90% of the bioinformaticians I have seen working simply sit down like monkeys in front of their monitor. I just don't understand this. I think that a place where somebody takes the time to correct behaviours like these is a good place to work; therefore, for me in the best place of the world to do bioinformatics, seats are comfortable and monitors are positioned at an ergonomic height.

Other than this, I would like to work for the 1000genomes consortium. I don't know what the conditions and the quality of work are, but there is a lot of data there and it would be good to be the among the first persons to use it.

ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode

haha that's great. i think a quality physical work environment is underrated. i would also demand two monitors or one very large one.

ADD REPLY
4
Entering edit mode
13.8 years ago
Laurent ★ 1.7k

Another point worth mentioning is whether the position is in a bioinformatics dedicated institute (like EBI for instance) or a more biology-oriented department. I think this makes a big difference for the day to day working atmosphere as well as how diverse the interaction will be.

In my experience, the atmosphere in bioinformatics-only groups tends to be quieter (i.e people essentially sitting in front of their screens), whereas there is much more traffic going on when sharing offices with wet-lab scientists. The type of collaborations that will come up spontaneously over time will thus also be different - bioinformatics-centric in the first case, while much more varied and biology oriented for the latter. Both are essential, of course. A notable point of a more wet-lab oriented environment is that one is more likely to directly interact with the data producers and those that ultimately interpret the results.

Personally, I don't favour any of the above, but it is helpful to know that there might be differences.

ADD COMMENT
4
Entering edit mode
13.8 years ago
Neilfws 49k

Very subjective. In my experience, where you live is more important than where you work. So the best place to do bioinformatics is wherever you are happiest.

ADD COMMENT
2
Entering edit mode
13.8 years ago

I do recommend the Joint Genome Institute for its leadership in genome projects. It's a very well funded place, huge infrastructure, stays in California and you probably used it's data, services or technologies iat least once in the past few months. What do you think?

On the other side of the US, there's Janelia Farm Research Campus, a small and quite modern research facility near Washington DC. People from there work closely to NCBI and Wellcome Trust guys. But, the distance keeps you a little independent. They are fond of innovation and challenges. E. g. Sean Eddy works there and HMMER was developed mostly there (the story is inside HMMER3/Ifernal manuals).

US places pay more and you work less than same level places in Europe. But, Europe is way better to live if you're single/no kids with a good offline life!

ADD COMMENT
1
Entering edit mode
13.8 years ago

In Maastricht the Netherlands of course! Minutes away from three countries and 4 capitals within 3 hours.

No seriously, in my opinion it does not matter where you are located to be a good bioinformatician. We are more and more a network generation of scientists, so it is important to have a good physical and social infrastructure.

When I was orientating for a proper location, a friend of mine suggested Amsterdam, to finally say that actually it does not matter where you are. Every university delivers good and bad students.

So to answer the question make sure to have both infrastructure available and maybe more importantly, don't be afraid to be mobile by doing interns, fellowships and visits at other institutes.

For me Maastricht is the place to be.

ADD COMMENT

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 1732 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6