The dumbest person in the room: moving labs and switching fields

Published: Nov. 24, 2022, 4:08 p.m.

After completing a PhD in cancer biology at the University of Chicago, Illinois, in 2017, Tim Fessenden moved to a laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge to focus on immunology.


Fessenden, who is now an editor at the Journal of Cell Biology in New York City, says that alongside adjusting to a new lab culture, he needed to learn new techniques, adding: \u201cI am a lifelong student, someone who always wants to be the dumbest person in the room.\u201d


Fessenden is joined by physician-scientist Ken Kosik, and Jennifer Pursley, a particle physicist-turned-medical physicist.


Kosik\u2019s neuroscience research and collaborations are influenced by his close working proximity to physical scientists. In 2004, he quit a tenured post at Harvard University\u2019s Longwood campus in Boston, Massachusetts, moving to a more multi-disciplinary location at the University of California, Santa Barbara.


Pursley, who left the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory at the University of Wisconsin\u2013Madison in Batavia, Illinois, in 2010, says of her move to Brigham and Women\u2019s Hospital in Boston: \u201cI walked into this completely new environment \u2014 I didn\u2019t know anyone. It was a real shock.\u201d

This is the fourth episode in a six-part Working Scientist podcast series on moving labs.



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