Guidelines for picking a lab
This is the most important decision you will make in graduate
school. There is no exact formula: ordering the priority of importance
of the individual factors described below is up to you. There
also may be more than one lab that would well suit your needs
and interests.
Initial
Goal: Fact gathering. Start by looking through the web pages for
the individual
departments to find labs doing research
that might potentially interest you. Even if you think you know
what you want to do (e.g. cancer), take a broad approach here.
Many many labs use technology or pursue ideas with relevance
to cancer even if it is not the major focus of the lab, and it
is more important for you to have an excellent training experience
than to pursue a narrowly targeted specific topic at this point
in your career. Each departmental or graduate group web page
should have links to the PI’s (primary investigator, faculty
member) home web page, where his / her research interests should
be described. Sometimes these descriptions are vague or out of
date. You can also look at their recent publications (use pubmed
to search as well as looking at their web page; again, the list
on the web page is often out of date) to get an idea of the type
of things going on the in lab in the recent past. In particular,
pay attention to the papers in which the PI is senior (last)
author. The other papers represent efforts in which the lab made
a contribution but did not initiate the work (and in which the
work was performed primarily elsewhere).
Factors:
1) Mentor
Rank: Assistant versus associate versus full professor.
You may receive advice
that you should shun assistant professors
because they are inexperienced and may leave because they fail
to get tenure. Don’t take this seriously. Both are true,
but there are compensating factors. Assistant professors at Stony
Brook rarely fail to get tenure; associate
and full professors are actually more likely to leave due to
receiving attractive offers elsewhere (there’s a lot of
moving around in this
business). Assistant professors are inexperienced.
But, they are also highly motivated concerning
bench work because they just finished being very successful postdocs.
They will be well trained in state-of-the-art techniques, understand
everything that is going on in the lab, most likely will do experimental
work themselves, and will be highly interactive
with the relatively small number of people in their
labs. Associate / full professors will have more experience at
mentoring, but can be quite busy
with university and national service responsibilities, may have
larger labs in which students get less
attention, and in some cases will be sufficiently distanced
from the bench that they are less able to mentor effectively
on a detailed experimental
level. In this case, it becomes important to assess how interactive
and helpful the other members of the
lab will be, which in some cases will be terrific. In summary,
mentor rank in itself is not an important criterion.
2) Publications. Use
Pubmed to look up the recent publications (last 3-5 years)
of the PI. This is quite important. Is the PI
publishing articles? If so, where? Are they in the type of journals
that you would want to develop a record in? Are most of the people
in the lab getting publications at regular intervals? Talk to
lab members about how the process of writing a paper in the lab
works. Does a useful educational opportunity take place (e.g.
the student writes the first draft and participates in the remainder
of the process)?
3) Funding. This
is harder to obtain. You can use CRISP to look up whether the
PI has NIH funding, and Google will usually find
NSF and some other funding. But these approaches generally miss
things and in any case are out of date. It’s considered
a bit rude to ask the PI how much funding they have – but
you can ask the lab how the past several years have been, which
is generally an indication of the future. In addition, you certainly
can ask the PI whether s/he would have funding to accept you as
a student were there otherwise to be mutual interest. No point
in wasting a rotation on a lab that couldn’t accept you.
Keep in mind re new assistant professors that they arrive with
a large start-up package that will give them financial support
for several years. Again, there is some risk since they may never
succeed in getting a grant – but most of our junior faculty
do succeed, and in the meantime they will have plenty of $.
4) Size
of lab. This is particular constitutes a personal
preference. Some students are more attracted to small labs,
some to big,
and there are pros and cons to both:
- Large labs will generally have experienced technicians,
advanced students, and postdocs from whom valuable technical training
and critical feedback can be obtained. There are likely to be
a wider range of techniques in operation in the lab, a greater
variety of reagents, more projects generating new research directions
that would represent potential sources of ideas for your projects.
The larger number of presentations made and papers written by
lab members will also serve to provide an advance educational
component. The key disadvantage is that the PI will generally
be busy and when not, split between many people. You are likely
to get very little time from the PI, and students who aren’t
doing well and / or who are not assertive about demanding
attention often get ignored for extended periods of time, which
can add greatly to the length of the Ph.D. process
(and lessen the ultimate quality of the work). If
you are looking at a large lab, then the PI is not the only element
to investigate. Find out about
the lab members – are they happy? Interactive? Is it a
good training environment? In the worst environments,
you will hear that students are assigned to “help” postdocs,
or that multiple students are put on to the same project (which
are both bad since you need first author publications),
or that a student doing badly hasn’t talked
to the advisor for months and can’t seem to make an appointment
to do so.
- Small labs are preferable for students who prefer
to have extensive interactions with the PI, assuming the PI is
available (not always
true, say for a busy MD-type). Small labs tend to be a bit more
feast or famine regarding funding (since they frequently operate
on just one major grant) and in general students will have a
greater burden in terms of setting up techniques and generating
common reagents. This can be good – it fosters greater
independence, at the cost of time.
- In the end, there is no specific recommendation here – but
use your own personality as a guide as to which kind of lab you
will be most productive in. Either way, assertiveness is key.
In a large lab, you will need to fight for the PI’s attention
and get people with no vested interest in you to help in your
training. In a small lab, you will have to be facile at getting
the same kind of assistance from people in other labs.
5) Lab
morale: This (aside from whether the
research topics interest you) is one
of the most important issues. Talk
to the students in the lab. Buy them lunch or a coffee and
find out
whether they are happy with their lab. Look beyond the surface.
On the one hand, people generally feel an instinctive loyalty
to their lab (or are afraid that their comments will get back
to the PI). On the other hand, it is the nature of being a thesis
student to be struggling with frustration on multiple levels
most of the time, so try to separate
out the specific complaints raised by the people you are interviewing
to assess which are generalizable and would thus be likely
to apply
to you if you
joined the lab (e.g. one particular project
not working is not a useful piece of negative information;
but the nature of the PI’s response to the situation
would be).
6) Medical
lab versus basic science. Ultimately, you will have
a lot of exposure
to medical research labs in your fellowship
years. This is the stage in your training when you need to get
a solid grounding in the approach of how to be a good scientist,
which most often is best presented in our basic science labs.
This is not to exclude all of our clinicians – there
are some notable excellent clinical / physician scientists here.
But use the guidelines above to determine the quality of the
training environment. If the lab is lacking
in people who can train you, resources to purchase the
equipment and supplies you will need, or is publishing relatively
little in good journals,
then this is unlikely to be a lab in which you will receive the
training you need, even if the PI is
an MD trained in precisely the subspecialty you wish to be your
career path. There are other ways to interact with these clinicians
if you wish to.
7) CSHL/BNL
versus Stony Brook. The environments and personnel
at CSHL/BNL are stellar. However, students undertaking their
theses at these institutions take longer on the average to complete
them because
a) They lose
time during the first Ph.D. year when they have to travel back
and
forth from Stony Brook to CSHL/BNL to take
courses and do TA’ing. Not too much gets done in the lab
in the first year. In contrast, Stony Brook students are able
to pop in and out of the lab and get and keep things going. More
inconvenience is encountered in subsequent years for thesis meetings,
weekly student research seminars that all students are supposed
to attend, qualifiers, and other mandatory events.
b) Time is lost when and if the CSHL/BNL students participate
in the various integration activities we have ongoing at Stony
Brook (monthly Clinical research speaker, clinical research,
Clinical research symposium day). If they don’t participate,
then the integrative aspect of the MSTP program is compromised.
Re-entry into the third years is also easier for students at
the home campus.
c) The labs at CSHL tend to be bigger / more postdoc oriented
and the PI’s are traveling more and have to raise more
money. This often leads to less attention per student. Highly
independent and assertive students can do quite well; quiet students
needing more attention in the early years may find themselves
drifting until something eventually kicks in (sometimes a year
or two later).
In the end, balance these negative issues against the strengths
and attractiveness of the lab. If the lab you really want to
work in is there, go for it. But give serious consideration to
Stony Brook labs as well, since you are likely to get out quicker
and have a richer non-thesis experience at the home campus.
Resources,
resources, resources: The most important resources are your
fellow students
(MSTP and regular Ph.D.), the graduate
program directors, and the MSTP director. Talk to everyone you
can before committing to a lab. There’s a wealth of common
knowledge out there about which mentors and labs represent the
best training environments, and making a bad choice at this stage
can cost you years of time and / or frustration.
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"Version:
August 24, 2006. This version supersedes all
previous versions."
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