ArkieDukie wrote:windsor wrote:Sorry I'm late responding...my weekend was eaten up with this:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/0 ... 97285.html
I am a bit handicapped by my lack of knowledge regarding the finer points of research publications/posters.
Given that you are still new, I would let this poster thing slide (what the hell is a poster anyway?) for now. I would focus my attentions on other things, particularly with those folks who "want to work with me"...and would not be jumping in to save the day on anything BM is involved in unless asked for assistance.
I think Lavabe is right on all points - it couldn't hurt define the collaborative roles and have a chat with BMs boss.
Oh, and the Grad Student is NOT in your problem tree. Step away from the grad student....
Thanks! Yeah, grad student is not my problem, and she may not be anyone's problem here for much longer. She turned in a fairly major program requirement (research proposal) this morning. It was due on Friday. Incapable of independent thought AND unable to finish assigned tasks in a timely manner. Yep, this person wants the boot from the graduate program.
The poster thing is definitely not worth fighting over. The upcoming manuscript, on the other hand, is another matter altogether. The plan is to feature the work in an upcoming special issue of a fairly prestigious journal. If I end up doing as much data analysis as I think I'm going to be doing, I'll insist on first authorship - or, at least shared first authorship. I believe the grad student will not be in the picture. BarMinion will likely pitch a fit, because she will want it all to herself. Based on what I've seen, though, BM is incapable of writing a legible scientific paper (she can barely speak English). Seems to me like data analysis and translation from BM to English should give me first authorship. This is a conversation I will be having when the appropriate time comes.
Update time: as I suspected, my colleague kicked the grad student out of her group. She's now looking for a new home. I got a phone call this morning from said grad student, and she wants to work for my boss with me as a co-advisor. Crappity, crappity, crap. I told her that I wouldn't have time with everything I've got going on but that I'd talk with my boss to see what he has in mind. Have not done so yet.
I had an extensive conversation with her via telephone and had to close my door at one point. The reason? She went off on BM and, while I was being as diplomatic as possible, I did not want to be overheard. The grad student claims that she was sabotaged by BM. You know that joint project we've been working on? The one that was supposedly the grad student's project? BM hid the data files, the lab relevant lab notebooks, and the samples. Basically, she's blocking the grad student from accessing her work. The grad student made the claim (without any prompting from me) that BM has been trying to edge her out of the project since her arrival in the lab (grad student was there before BM). Based on what I have seen, I think there's some truth to her claims. However, I think the grad student is not as innocent as she claims. The truth is probably somewhere in the middle.
I'm in a majorly tricky spot here. My first instinct is to run as quickly as possible in the opposite direction, but there's a part of me that's tempted to help the grad student by supervising her as she finishes her project. I suspect it may be the best chance for both of us to get the credit we deserve on a project that BM is trying to commandeer as her own. Politically, though, it would probably cause problems with my colleague (BM's boss), and the grad student is a bit of a problem child. Thoughts on what I should do? When I talk to my boss, should I tell him my suspicions about BM's behavior? Should I help her finish the project "out of the goodness of my heart" so that BM and the grad student won't have to work together, thus performing an end-run around BM? Should I run in the opposite direction and use my ballooning workload as an excuse?
Why the HECK do I always end up working with these people?
Opportunistic backstabbers seem to flock to my field, drat the luck. I'd love to throw NuBarbie, Supervisor Barbie, The Minion, and BarMinion into a lab together and let them fight it out. That could be entertaining. First one off the island would be Supervisor Barbie. I suspect NuBarbie might be next. After that, all bets are off, but I can't think of two people who deserve each other more than The Minion and BarMinion.
Most people say that is it is the intellect which makes a great scientist. They are wrong: it is character.
-- Albert Einstein