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By Michael White | September 24th 2008 03:55 PM | 2 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
About Michael

Welcome to Adaptive Complexity, where I write about genomics, systems biology, evolution, and the connection between science and literature,

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Elias Zerhouni, director of the National Institutes of Health since 2002, is resigning his position at the end of October.

Zerhouni has led the NIH through an interesting period, and my take is that he handled the challenges well. He leaves the NIH with more funding focused on young scientists and unconventional/high-risk/high payoff science. He has, during an era of big team genome science, emphasized the need for also funding the traditional smaller groups of creative individuals doing basic science. He has repeatedly emphasized the need for basic science, while also looking at more focused work on translating science into clinical solutions.

Among his major challenges, he's had to deal with declining NIH budgets after the 5-year doubling period (1998-2003). A major risk was attrition of the next generation of researchers - younger scientists who lose out to the natural advantages of more senior investigators in the competition for grants. Also at issue was the balance of big-budget, large scale genome science vs. smaller projects led by researchers with more flexibility to be creative. (Big team science can come with a big bureaucracy.)

In government that seems to be staffed with hacks at many levels, Zerhouni was a refreshing dose of competence.

Comments

Hank
That's one guy who doesn't think it's a Republican war on science, since he had to sit through a ridiculous hearing on shutting off open access for NIH studies after he did all that work to get it implemented and it was a bill introduced by a Democrat on the take from publishing companies.

At some point you fight all the battles you can fight. Anyone can be a leader when budgets are going up. The NIH is still flush with cash - a drop after doubling is not as bad off as the NSF. If they can give a billion dollars to Johns Hopkins alone, I don't think they are hurting.

P.S. I would tell any biologist to go to Johns Hopkins. Clearly they have money and they don't even need a basketball team worth a darn.

adaptivecomplexity
P.S. I would tell any biologist to go to Johns Hopkins. Clearly they have money and they don't even need a basketball team worth a darn.

If their basketball team sucks, maybe they should try to put their scientists on TV instead, and have them do endorsements...

The community support for open access has been overhyped, I think, which is why you see it vulnerable now. PLoS, for example, has many hard-core supporters, but I'm surrounded by colleagues who think it's been oversold, and some who are looking forward to the demise of PLoS.

But I agree it is a shame when politicians cave under pressure and fail to consider a very non-hot-button issue like this on its merits. Come on, who is not going to get reelected based on their NIH open access vote? Can't we figure this one out rationally?

Some journals go way too far the other way, in terms of restrictiveness (like Elsevier journals or those from the American Chemical Society), but many journals are moving towards a decent model, where material is open access a year or so after publication, or authors can choose to make their paper open access for additional page charges.

(BTW, see if you can figure out how to comply with the NIH policy, using this handy dandy flow chart (PDF) - it's a model of bureaucratic clarity!)

Mike

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