Biologists meet statisticians: A workshop for young scientists to foster interdisciplinary team work
Benjamin Hofner, Lea Vaas, John-Philip Lawo, Tina M\"uller, Johannes, Sikorski, and Dirk Repsilber

TL;DR
This paper describes a workshop designed to improve interdisciplinary collaboration between young biologists and statisticians, addressing communication barriers and fostering mutual understanding in life sciences and statistics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel workshop concept that pairs young scientists from biology and statistics to enhance interdisciplinary communication and collaboration.
Findings
Positive feedback from participants
Improved mutual understanding reported
Potential for long-term interdisciplinary networks
Abstract
Life science and statistics have necessarily become essential partners. The need to plan complex, structured experiments, involving elaborated designs, and the need to analyse datasets in the era of systems biology and high throughput technologies has to build upon professional statistical expertise. On the other hand, conducting such analyses and also developing improved or new methods, also for novel kinds of data, has to build upon solid biological understanding and practise. However, the meeting of scientists of both fields is often hampered by a variety of communicative hurdles - which are based on field-specific working languages and cultural differences. As a step towards a better mutual understanding, we developed a workshop concept bringing together young experimental biologists and statisticians, to work as pairs and learn to value each others competences and practise…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInterdisciplinary Research and Collaboration · Genetics, Bioinformatics, and Biomedical Research · Biomedical and Engineering Education
