Bioinformatics and Systems Biology: Multidisciplinary scientists versus Interdisciplinary scientist
Multidisciplinarity is the act of joining together two or more disciplines without integration. Each discipline yields discipline specific results while any integration would be left to a third party observer. An example of multidisciplinarity would be a panel presentation on the many facets of the AIDS pandemic (medicine, politics, epidemiology) in which each section is given as a stand-alone presentation.
A multidisciplinary community or project is made up of people from different disciplines and professions who are engaged in working together as equal stakeholders in addressing a common challenge. The key question is how well can the challenge be decomposed into nearly separable subparts, and then addressed via the distributed knowledge in the community or project team. The lack of shared vocabulary between people and communication overhead is an additional challenge in these communities and projects. However, if similar challenges of a particular type need to be repeatedly addressed, and each challenge can be properly decomposed, a multidisciplinary community can be exceptionally efficient and effective. A multidisciplinary person is a person with degrees from two or more academic disciplines, so one person can take the place of two or more people in a multidisciplinary community or project team. Over time, multidisciplinary work does not typically lead to an increase nor a decrease in the number of academic disciplines.
while interdisciplinarity can be described as
“Interdisciplinarity” in referring to an approach to organizing intellectual inquiry is an evolving field, and stable, consensus definitions are not yet established for some subordinate or closely related fields.
An interdisciplinary community or project is made up of people from multiple disciplines and professions who are engaged in creating and applying new knowledge as they work together as equal stakeholders in addressing a common challenge. The key question is what new knowledge (of an academic discipline nature), which is outside the existing disciplines, is required to address the challenge. Aspects of the challenge cannot be addressed easily with existing distributed knowledge, and new knowledge becomes a primary subgoal of addressing the common challenge. The nature of the challenge, either its scale or complexity, requires that many people have interactional expertise to improve their efficiency working across multiple disciplines as well as within the new interdisciplinary area. An interdisciplinarary person is a person with degrees from one or more academic disciplines with additional interactional expertise in one or more additional academic disciplines, and new knowledge that is claimed by more than one discipline. Over time, interdisciplinary work can lead to an increase or a decrease in the number of academic disciplines.
16 Responses to “Bioinformatics and Systems Biology: Multidisciplinary scientists versus Interdisciplinary scientist”
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[...] crisis This is a topic which has always eluded me, I wrote sometime back on the fine line of multidisc... abhishek-tiwari.com/2010/04/interdisciplinary-scientists-identity.html




















Interesting question. After three years in a *inter*disciplinary biocentre, I’d hazard that the Great and the Good in the computer science building would burst out laughing if I wandered up to them and asked for a lectureship.
Bioinformatics and Systems Biology: Multidisciplinary scientists versus Interdisciplinary scientist: I could be .. http://tinyurl.com/lwkypb
Bioinformatics and Systems Biology: Multidisciplinary scientists versus Interdisciplinary scientist: I could be .. http://tinyurl.com/lwkypb
Bioinformatics and Systems Biology: Multidisciplinary scientists …: The nature of the challenge, either its sc.. http://bit.ly/L7pp8
Bioinformatics and Systems Biology: Multidisciplinary scientists …: The nature of the challenge, either its sc.. http://bit.ly/L7pp8
RT @abhishektiwari Bioinformatics and Systems Biology: Multidisciplinary scientists versus Interdisciplinary http://tinyurl.com/lwkypb
RT @abhishektiwari Bioinformatics and Systems Biology: Multidisciplinary scientists versus Interdisciplinary http://tinyurl.com/lwkypb
RT @XuemeiRT @abhishektiwari Bioinformatics and Systems Biology: Multidisciplinary scientists http://tinyurl.com/lwkypb
RT @XuemeiRT @abhishektiwari Bioinformatics and Systems Biology: Multidisciplinary scientists http://tinyurl.com/lwkypb
Hi. thanks for your enlightening follow up to my blog post. It was very interesting to differentiate inter-disciplinary from multi-disciplinary. I think the two terms have become blurred in systems biology, and it would have been an interesting point to raise at our own discussion. I wonder if there was a language barrier throughout the forum between industry and academia.
It is true from my own experience that systems biology in industry is very much pro multi-disciplinary and anti-inter-disciplinary. An interesting question perhaps is how doctoral training centre’s plan to train inter-disciplinary scientists for multi-disciplinary research. Perhaps emerging start-up companies in the field of systems or synthetic biology (or bioinformatics) will embrace inter-disciplinary scientists, where there aren’t sufficient specialists available in their small teams. It would be interesting to see if large multi-national corporation HR departments are planning for inter-disciplinary employees in the future.
Multi-disciplinarity vs. inter-disciplinarity – http://bit.ly/11cXrA
Multi-disciplinarity vs. inter-disciplinarity – http://bit.ly/11cXrA
RT @Al3xP: Multi-disciplinarity vs. inter-disciplinarity – http://bit.ly/11cXrA
RT @Al3xP: Multi-disciplinarity vs. inter-disciplinarity – http://bit.ly/11cXrA
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