| Literature DB >> 26583922 |
Emile R Chimusa1, Mamana Mbiyavanga2, Velaphi Masilela2, Judit Kumuthini2.
Abstract
A shortage of practical skills and relevant expertise is possibly the primary obstacle to social upliftment and sustainable development in Africa. The "omics" fields, especially genomics, are increasingly dependent on the effective interpretation of large and complex sets of data. Despite abundant natural resources and population sizes comparable with many first-world countries from which talent could be drawn, countries in Africa still lag far behind the rest of the world in terms of specialized skills development. Moreover, there are serious concerns about disparities between countries within the continent. The multidisciplinary nature of the bioinformatics field, coupled with rare and depleting expertise, is a critical problem for the advancement of bioinformatics in Africa. We propose a formalized matchmaking system, which is aimed at reversing this trend, by introducing the Knowledge Transfer Programme (KTP). Instead of individual researchers travelling to other labs to learn, researchers with desirable skills are invited to join African research groups for six weeks to six months. Visiting researchers or trainers will pass on their expertise to multiple people simultaneously in their local environments, thus increasing the efficiency of knowledge transference. In return, visiting researchers have the opportunity to develop professional contacts, gain industry work experience, work with novel datasets, and strengthen and support their ongoing research. The KTP develops a network with a centralized hub through which groups and individuals are put into contact with one another and exchanges are facilitated by connecting both parties with potential funding sources. This is part of the PLOS Computational Biology Education collection.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26583922 PMCID: PMC4652891 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004512
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Comput Biol ISSN: 1553-734X Impact factor: 4.475
Description of the KTP’s stakeholders and benefits offered by the KTP to each of the stakeholders.
| Stakeholders | Description | Benefits |
|---|---|---|
| Knowledge-seeker/Principal Investigator (PI) | Any scientist at a university or in a private or public organisation with a need for bioinformatics skills development in a particular project. | Access to expert support for running the project; equipping of staff to effectively work on the project; access to KTP facilities and resources for executing the project; reduction in project running costs as a result of collective KTP funding; quick and easy identification of support from experts in the KTP database; future international collaboration; capacity developed locally. |
| Trainee/Associate | Any scientist, researcher, student, or employee in need of bioinformatics training. A subset of trainees will form a local contingent of potential future African trainers. | Faster turnaround time for the transfer of knowledge; access to all the trainings offered locally; opportunity to establish collaboration links with fellow associates or experts on the project; direct implementation of the acquired knowledge. |
| Expert | Researcher, professional, or field application specialist with proven expertise in a relevant area of computational biology, bioinformatics, or biostatistics. | International experience and exposure to an African setting for doing research; opportunity to share and transfer knowledge as a project expert and/or trainer; novel dataset or problem; potential publication or patent; potential collaboration. |
| Hosting Institution | Institution associated with the PI that will provide the facilities for the execution of a KTP project and/or a KTP training session. In addition, there are administrative structures to manage the KTP as a whole. | Increased profile for the hosting institution; contribution to research and development in Africa. |
| Scientific Advisory Committee (SAC) | Selected group of researchers and professionals with relevant expertise, assembled to safeguard the quality of project proposals and the matchmaking process between the experts and the project. | International experience and exposure to an African setting for doing research; social upliftment in the field of expertise; provides a level of personal satisfaction. |
| Review Committee (RC) | Selected group of researchers who review and assess the bioinformatics expert applications to ensure the quality of the expert base. | International experience and exposure to African setting for doing research; social upliftment in the field of expertise; provides a level of personal satisfaction. |
Fig 1Process map of the matchmaking platform.