Jeanne M. Fair is a scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory with a focus in ornithology, infectious disease ecology, and climate change.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
Acknowledgements Introduction 1. Transformative Collaborations 2. Communities 3. A Scientific Revolution 4. The Science of Team Science 5. Trust 6. Competence 7. Communication 8. Fish Dont Know Theyre in Water 9. Dream Teams 10. Science Networks 11. What the hell just happened? References
Fair provides an insiders view of research collaboration while making very good use of existing research and data, including her own. Scientific Collaboration is a wonderful guide for people who work on research teams, but it should also appeal to a wide array of practitioners and scientists.
—Barry Bozeman, Arizona State University, coauthor of The Strength in Numbers: The New Science of Team Science
Through real examples, this book helps to illustrate how to put into practice scholarship on team science to address critical, sometimes timely, societal needs.
—Kavita M. Berger, National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine
From tackling disease emergence to environmental change, Dr. Fair weaves her experiences as a research team member into tales of how effective collaboration will lead to enjoyable and productive careers. The complex challenges scientists must address today, she argues, require diverse teams. This book will advance science across all disciplines.
—Sarah Hamer, Texas A&M University
—Barry Bozeman, Arizona State University, coauthor of The Strength in Numbers: The New Science of Team Science
Through real examples, this book helps to illustrate how to put into practice scholarship on team science to address critical, sometimes timely, societal needs.
—Kavita M. Berger, National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine
From tackling disease emergence to environmental change, Dr. Fair weaves her experiences as a research team member into tales of how effective collaboration will lead to enjoyable and productive careers. The complex challenges scientists must address today, she argues, require diverse teams. This book will advance science across all disciplines.
—Sarah Hamer, Texas A&M University

