(or how the heck do we explain what we actually know about epigenetics)
I was recently part of a Tweetchat [#EPNtalks](see here for @EpigenomicsNet storify of the chat)
I threw something out there that I have been thinking about for about five years.
Where is Genetics/Genomics/Epigenetics 's Stephen Hawking- or probably more accurately for today's kids our Neil Tyson DeGrasse?
N.B. While I love the Emperor of All Maladies, that is not the direction I envision with all due respect to Dr.Mukherjee.
I find it really frustrating that with all the great communicators that I know are in the field, we do not have a book that is targeted to the general public.
It is a frustration that I think has stunted the field, allowed a bunch of illogical mumbo-jumbo to replace clear concise analogy.
In my mind there are a lot of reasons that we have gotten here...some of them are acceptable like the fundamental changes in funding levels that have been seen world-wide in the last decade or so. There are also some that I find completely unacceptable.
Here is a short list of unacceptable reason why "our" ability to communicate genetics/epigenetics sucks:
- We (scientists) don't actually understand much beyond their little patch of grass. I think we force a ridiculous level of specialization on trainees and students.
- We don't have well thought out experiments. In the last five or so years we have gone with this notion that you can collect data and find clear real, unbiased answers without a hypothesis.
- We don't train Ph.D students to analyze (strongly related to #2). It is common fort MolBio, Genetics or Biochem graduate students to NOT take a statistics course prior to starting their Ph.D.
- We have fallen in love with jargon. Getting through a Science or Nature paper nowadays is a horrendous effort in acronyms and 5 syllable words.
- We have left public relations to the universities as we are too busy - doing science- to explain.
I have put some thought into this and I have outline a potential book or probably better as a video series. I have attached it below. As always if you have any comments please add them below or email me directly at crwynder AT gmail DOT com
My script/book idea for a book focused on how the machinery of Epigenetics relates to the real world examples of diversity and development. |
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