Hello,
It would be very helpful for me if I could receive some feedback about the issue summarised in the title. After several years as a postdoc (mostly) in mathematical biology, I joined, as a staff scientist / postdoc, a wet lab in which I am the single bioinformatician (I read somewhere this role called: pet bioinformatician :) ).
I am currently involved in the analysis of transcriptomic datasets, generated by my colleagues, which will lead to middle author publications; however, it doesn’t seem that time allocated for a first author project is in the list of priorities :)
I was wondering if this is a common problem and how people approach it. Do you need to negotiate a percentage of time to dedicate to a first author project? What would you consider an appropriate balance between computational support to other people's projects and (first author) research?
Thank you all,
Pet Bioinformatician :)
This is a common drawback of being bioinformatician, there is a nice comment in Nature which addresses this problem. I have the same problem. I am working for 5 years now as 'staff scientist', I support all the bioinformatics in our research department, but I am being paid as starting post-doc because the function 'staff scientist' doesn't exist at my institute. I have had many arguments with my boss about that it is not fair how I get evaluated (as post-doc, so no first or last author papers, and no grants means no career development). I am at the point to search for a job outside of bioinformatics.
Everyone doing data analysis for a lab in a postdoc job position should immediately consider exploring alternative employment. It is illegal from the employers perspective to label jobs as "postdoc" (the rationale they give you for classifying you as "postdoc" is bullshit). Even though it is illegal, the practice is rampant because of the exploitation that it allows.
A postdoc takes a serious pay cut, reduced retirement benefits, diminished career advancement prospects etc. all for the promise that in return they will be trained to become an independent and well-rounded scientist. Working on someone else's data is not an independent work. I do understand that everyone's circumstances are different, do it for a year or two if you must, but keep actively exploring alternatives.
We live in an era where computational data analysis is among the most sought after career choices. As a bioinformatician, you already analyze the most complex datasets known to mankind. Vote with your feet. Go out there and start applying to jobs in bioinformatics, there are plenty of options and explore other related fields as well. Eventually, all roads end up in life sciences :-)
Unethical yes, illegal no
it is illegal in the sense that it runs afoul with the terms and conditions that most funding agencies require to classify and pay someone as a postdoc.
It would be helpful if you could add information on whether your legal advice holds for the US only, or if it is valid worldwide.
Thanks, Istvan Albert. I'll definitely consider other alternatives.
Very interesting link b.nota, thanks. I am sorry to know that you might leave this research area.
I've converted this to a "forum" post.
Unsure if you can generate a publon out of putting your lab's work in context with the existing plethora of SRA datas via evaluating multiple external data sets and such, but it may be a strategy to do papers that aren't directly correlated to I-harvested-the-cells-I-first-author?
Thanks, it might help to increase my boss interest.
Thanks so much to all of you! Your comments were incredibly helpful!! :)