Hello,
I am in a molecular biology PhD program. I am interested in epigenetics and am in discussions to join a developmental epigenetics lab. I have openly discussed with the PI that I would like to choose a computational project, since my goal is a career in bioinformatics. However, she is concerned (understandably) about what exactly this project would look like for someone with no computer science training, and how I would generate enough original knowledge to publish good work and eventually graduate.
I could not really give her an answer. All my experience in the field so far has been more applied bioinformatics (e.g. using existing tools to mine/analyze data), and I'm not sure how feasible it would be for me to catch up on all the computer science required to actually develop new, useful tools.
Is it possible to graduate from a PhD program by just using various data science and statistics methods to test a hypothesis in existing data, or do you really need to be creating tools? I would appreciate any perspective to help me understand my position (and hopefully convince my PI)!
Thank you, this was really helpful and clarifying for me. While I couldn't find anybody comfortable mentoring me in bioinformatics in the biology departments, I found a couple people in the statistics department, and I am going to talk to them next week.