Title:
Career Profile: Dr Bryce Vissel
Author: Rivqa Bina Berger
Category: Career Profile
Dr
Bryce Vissel is a scientist who believes that if you make
smart choices, you can guide your own destiny. Rather than
taking the ‘easy route’, he has consistently chosen to work
in the place where he felt he could do the best science.

Dr Bryce Vissel |
Vissel
decided to get into research after a year as a pharmacist,
mainly because he felt dissatisfied with the work, but also,
he says, because “I was not very good at wearing a tie”. He
completed his PhD at the Murdoch Institute in Melbourne, which
lead to major fellowships at the Garvan Institute and the
Salk Institute in California, where he received the prestigious
Hereditary Disease Foundation Lieberman Award for his work
in neuroscience. Vissel now runs a lab in the Garvan Institute
that conducts stem cell research and research into synaptic
plasticity, the ability of neurons to modify their connectivity
in response to experience, which is important in learning,
memory, drug addiction, and thought to be significant in schizophrenia.
For Vissel,
his career is rewarding on both scientific and humanitarian
levels. Teaching is fun and it is always gratifying to have
research published in high-impact journals and recognised
by other scientists through citation. However, the best part
is the opportunity to interact with the community. His work
relates to people with spinal cord injury, stroke, and Huntington’s
disease and he finds it “rewarding when you can tell them
things that may have a real impact for them in the immediate
future”.
Nevertheless,
a research career also has its downside, particularly when
things do not work. A drawback is that funding depends on
good results. Often, the lack of results is no one’s fault,
but rather due to the tricky nature of science itself. “Science
is not something that you just do as a job,” says Vissel.
“It is a passion, and if you have invested yourself in something
personally, when things fail, it is more personally frustrating
and disappointing.”
Although
those times are daunting, “determination, hard work, commitment
and doing things a bit out of the ordinary can get you through”.
Once sufficient basic knowledge is gained, science becomes
a progression of thinking creatively about what discoveries
are needed to push a field forward and then beginning to think
laterally about what needs to be done, rather than rushing
ahead and doing the first thing that comes to mind. “Doing
that forced creative thinking can save of time and get you
through some great hardships,” says Vissel.
Science
in Australia
Many people travel overseas thinking that being at a top institution
will turn them into a great scientist. However what they fail
to realise is that people do better there because they work
harder. “The reality is that you will be working 12 to 14
hours a day, six to seven days a week and you will be exhausted
and straining yourself. But after three or four years of that,
you will come out with a major publication that will impact
the field,” says Vissel.
The same
results can be achieved in Australia provided the commitment
and conscientiousness is there. According to Vissel, funding
for research science in Australia is slowly improving in response
to public pressure and the quality of science here is comparable
to other leading countries. Often people say that Australians
“punch above their weight” because they do so well with so
little. Also many people here put their social lives first,
whereas “investment early on and hard work pays off enormously”.
In any
case, the key to a financially rewarding career in research
science is being good at what you do, as in any career. “If
you are good at what you do, once you are at a more senior
level you will be asked to consult, or be on committees or
boards of pharmaceutical companies, and these things add to
your salary,” says Vissel.
Science Education
A key part of enthusing young people about science is letting
them know that getting to the truly exciting phase of the
field takes time. It is important to get the basics in place
first no matter how tedious compared to cutting-edge research.
“Science
is first taught as a series of facts, and the truth of science
in practice is that it is a series of unknowns,” says Vissel.
There are many ambiguities and contradictions in science,
because no one knows the right answers to any question. Although
science is assessed with multiple choice questions even at
university level, experts in the field are constantly debating
what is the right answer.
Vissel
believes that students need to be taught that once they get
past the stage of learning the boring “alphabet” of science
(the basics), they can start “reading” by understanding the
scientific process of studying the unknown, and getting involved
in it. Once that stage is reached, science becomes fascinating.
“Unfortunately,
many scientists do not transmit this excitement effectively,”
says Vissel. “But many of scientists don’t get to experience
the excitement of it – they get bogged down in the realities
of the day-to-day experiments. But I think it is important,
if you are going to be a scientist, to find people who inspire
you and who are inspired.”
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