59 min

Inspiring Creativity through Night Science Inside Cancer Careers

    • Science

 
 
In this episode of Inside Cancer Careers, Dr. Oliver Bogler interviews two guests, Dr. Itai Yanai, who is a Professor at NYU School of Medicine, and Dr. Martin Lercher, who is a Professor at Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf. They are also co-founders of Night Science, which is the creative aspect of scientific research. They discuss the importance of scientific creativity and explore why it is often overlooked in scientific training and how it can be nurtured. Drs. Yanai and Lercher then discuss their early inspirations for pursuing science, their career paths, and the importance of interdisciplinary thinking.  

Show Notes 

Dr. Martin Lercher 
Dr. Itai Yanai  
Night Science Workshops 
"It takes two to think" editorial in Nature Biotechnology 
Night Science Episode with Daniel Kahneman  
Night Science Episode with Albert-László Barabási 
The Society of Genes (book) 

Ad: NanCI - Connecting Scientists mobile app 

The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins   

Your Turn Recommendations: 

Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman 


The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron 
Night Science Podcasts 

 TRANSCRIPT
Oliver Bogler 

Hello and welcome to Inside Cancer Careers, a podcast from the National Cancer Institute where we explore all the different ways people fight cancer and hear their stories. I'm your host, Oliver Bogler from NCI Center for Cancer Training. Today, we're talking about scientific creativity, an often overlooked but vital element in a successful research career and how you can take practical steps to nurture it, evoke it and connect with others around it. I'm going to admit I'm really excited about today's conversation. 

Listen through to the end of the show to hear our guests make some interesting recommendations and where we invite you to Take Your Turrn.  

So it's my pleasure to welcome two very special guests, Dr. Itai Yanai, professor at the Institute for Systems Genetics and in Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology at the New York University Grossman School of Medicine. Welcome, Itai. 

 

Itai Yanai 

Thank you, Oliver. It's fantastic to be here. 

 

Oliver Bogler 

And Dr. Martin Lercher, professor and head of the Institute of Computational Cell Biology at the Heinrich Heine University in Düsseldorf, Germany. Welcome, Martin. 

 

Martin Lercher 

Well, thanks. Thank you so much for inviting us. 

 

Oliver Bogler 

So it seems obvious that scientists need to be creative, of course, as well as rigorous and thorough, ethical and informed and probably many other things. But we rarely ever talk about creativity, let alone teach it to early career scientists. Why is that? And what are you doing to change that? 

 

Martin Lercher 

Well, we think it's a disaster that it is like that. And we want to make our contribution to change that. Why that is? I think it's partly historical that, you know, it seemed more important to distinguish science from non-science, from philosophy, for example, which is great at generating ideas, but not good at throwing out wrong ideas. So historically, scientists training has focused on what we call the day science part, on the testing of ideas, and not so much on the generation of ideas. So I think that's at least part of the explanation. Itai, what do yobu think? 

 

Itai Yanai 

Yeah, well, it may also be that it's more straightforward to teach the day science. We can have a kind of control over the day science part because what is day science? Day science is you have a hypothesis and you're going to test it. You're going to design an experiment. You're going to build in controls. You really are calling the shots in day science and it's harder relatively to sort of wrap our minds around the notion that we cannot control the creative process like that. 

 

Oliver Bogler 

 
 
In this episode of Inside Cancer Careers, Dr. Oliver Bogler interviews two guests, Dr. Itai Yanai, who is a Professor at NYU School of Medicine, and Dr. Martin Lercher, who is a Professor at Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf. They are also co-founders of Night Science, which is the creative aspect of scientific research. They discuss the importance of scientific creativity and explore why it is often overlooked in scientific training and how it can be nurtured. Drs. Yanai and Lercher then discuss their early inspirations for pursuing science, their career paths, and the importance of interdisciplinary thinking.  

Show Notes 

Dr. Martin Lercher 
Dr. Itai Yanai  
Night Science Workshops 
"It takes two to think" editorial in Nature Biotechnology 
Night Science Episode with Daniel Kahneman  
Night Science Episode with Albert-László Barabási 
The Society of Genes (book) 

Ad: NanCI - Connecting Scientists mobile app 

The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins   

Your Turn Recommendations: 

Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman 


The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron 
Night Science Podcasts 

 TRANSCRIPT
Oliver Bogler 

Hello and welcome to Inside Cancer Careers, a podcast from the National Cancer Institute where we explore all the different ways people fight cancer and hear their stories. I'm your host, Oliver Bogler from NCI Center for Cancer Training. Today, we're talking about scientific creativity, an often overlooked but vital element in a successful research career and how you can take practical steps to nurture it, evoke it and connect with others around it. I'm going to admit I'm really excited about today's conversation. 

Listen through to the end of the show to hear our guests make some interesting recommendations and where we invite you to Take Your Turrn.  

So it's my pleasure to welcome two very special guests, Dr. Itai Yanai, professor at the Institute for Systems Genetics and in Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology at the New York University Grossman School of Medicine. Welcome, Itai. 

 

Itai Yanai 

Thank you, Oliver. It's fantastic to be here. 

 

Oliver Bogler 

And Dr. Martin Lercher, professor and head of the Institute of Computational Cell Biology at the Heinrich Heine University in Düsseldorf, Germany. Welcome, Martin. 

 

Martin Lercher 

Well, thanks. Thank you so much for inviting us. 

 

Oliver Bogler 

So it seems obvious that scientists need to be creative, of course, as well as rigorous and thorough, ethical and informed and probably many other things. But we rarely ever talk about creativity, let alone teach it to early career scientists. Why is that? And what are you doing to change that? 

 

Martin Lercher 

Well, we think it's a disaster that it is like that. And we want to make our contribution to change that. Why that is? I think it's partly historical that, you know, it seemed more important to distinguish science from non-science, from philosophy, for example, which is great at generating ideas, but not good at throwing out wrong ideas. So historically, scientists training has focused on what we call the day science part, on the testing of ideas, and not so much on the generation of ideas. So I think that's at least part of the explanation. Itai, what do yobu think? 

 

Itai Yanai 

Yeah, well, it may also be that it's more straightforward to teach the day science. We can have a kind of control over the day science part because what is day science? Day science is you have a hypothesis and you're going to test it. You're going to design an experiment. You're going to build in controls. You really are calling the shots in day science and it's harder relatively to sort of wrap our minds around the notion that we cannot control the creative process like that. 

 

Oliver Bogler 

59 min

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