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The Training of Cancer Researchers cover
Also available at Amazon and Kobo

Advances in cancer research have grown exponentially in recent decades. What we now know about the disease owes a lot to breakthroughs in science and technology. Cancer researchers have had to solve increasingly difficult problems with methods that were unimaginable just a few years ago, and new generations of researchers have to be trained to face these challenges.

One important aspect of their training is the framing of social, economic and cultural changes of the human population. Despite having state-of-the-art technology and specializations, researchers are still required to think faster than ever before, making new discoveries fit the practical situation of each type of cancer. This book discusses a number of topics that address these challenges and the origins of cancer research from a cultural and historical perspective.

Sample Chapter(s)
Chapter 1: The Original Idea as the Main Driver in Cancer Research (449 KB)


Contents:
  • The Original Idea as the Main Driver in Cancer Research
  • Trends in Scientific Discovery
  • The Communality of Science in Cancer Research
  • The Economic Basis of Cancer Research
  • Is Politics Part of the Cancer Research Affair?
  • The Role of Society in the Training of Cancer Researchers
  • The Perception of Cancer Research by the Public
  • Measuring Scientific Innovation in Cancer Research
  • The Past and Present of Academic Research
  • What the Future of Cancer Research will Look Like

Readership: Graduate and medical students, postdoctoral and research fellows, and scientists looking to go into cancer research; policy makers.