Astronomy Culture: Journal Club

January 29th, 2010

I missed our astronomy journal club today, so I thought I could take some of that time I “saved” and invest it here in talking about what is journal club.

In the sciences, you generally finish classes in your second year of graduate school, and are not likely to take more.   Teach more yes, but not take more.

Additionally, this is when a scientist focuses on their thesis topic.   Focuses deep.   Becomes the world expert on some little tiny niche in some sub-sub-field.   After getting the PhD, there are post-doc positions and perhaps eventually a faculty job, with each career step predicated upon ample publication.   Those who publish most tend to be those who stay in their subfield, for better or worse.   Not so much new to learn to write each paper as someone who does very different things.

Still, a scientist should keep up with the broader field, at least the important results.   There are not a lot of formal ways of doing this, and most scientists I know can’t keep up with reading papers in their subfield let alone outside it.

One way astronomical culture has evolved to deal with this problem is to invent the “Journal Club.”   In most departments, and not all have a journal club, people meet once a week to discuss a new or relatively new paper of special interest, with one person leading the discussion.   Most of these papers are preprints available online from the astrophysics preprint server.

There are different philosophies about what Journal Club is for and how to run it.   I’ve outlined some of my personal thoughts above.   Others sometimes feel it’s for educating grad students, and giving them a chance to give more informal presentations before needing to give high-pressure seminars like dissertation defenses.

I don’t know if journal clubs are common in all fields, but I’ve seen them in most astronomy departments I’ve been in or visited for any length of time.

It’s tough sometimes, with teaching, students, faculty meetings, administrative work, and your own research to even pay attention to the latest cool planet discovered or a new record-holder for most distant object.   Journal Club helps a lot.   When you find the time to attend.

Share/Bookmark

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.