I have the pleasure of working alongside a fantastic team of five, where we all put our skills as lab technicians and scientists to the test. Together, we ensure that our epoxy resins meet the high-quality standards our company is known for.
I work within a group of other scientists – ten of us including our supervisor – and also with other groups that we collaborate with on big projects. This is fairly common in research because one group is unlikely to be able to do everything necessary on a project. I can write software and do data analysis but because I only do computational work I rely on other people to provide me the data from experiments.
It’s a mix! I’d say I work mostly with other people. I work under/with my supervisors, who are scientists who have done science for much longer than I have and are teaching me how to do good science. I have a lab group who have the same supervisors as me, studying similar things I am, to learn from too. I also have other PhD students around me, who may be doing different work than I am but can teach me about their research topics and what tools and techniques they use! But a lot of the *actual* work I do is best done by one person- like coding or lab work- even though I ask other people for advice/help.
I have a small research group up here in Edinburgh but I also collaborate with people all over the world. Modern science is not an individual pursuit as it once was but is often the result of extended and extensive collaborations.
I work as part of a team of 9 people. I do most of my experiments by myself, but by working with other people we can get more results more quickly and discuss things together. I also talk to other scientists all over the world to try and design new experiments!
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