M Carolina Elias1, Lucile M Floeter-Winter2, Jesus P Mena-Chalco3. 1. Laboratório Especial de Ciclo Celular, Instituto Butantan, São Paulo, SP, Brasil. 2. Departamento de Fisiologia, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brasil. 3. Centro de Matemática, Computação e Cognição, Universidade Federal do ABC, Santo André, SP, Brasil.
Abstract
Brazilian scientists have been contributing to the protozoology field for more than 100 years with important discoveries of new species such as Trypanosoma cruzi and Leishmania spp. In this work, we used a Brazilian thesis database (Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel) covering the period from 1987-2011 to identify researchers who contributed substantially to protozoology. We selected 248 advisors by filtering to obtain researchers who supervised at least 10 theses. Based on a computational analysis of the thesis databases, we found students who were supervised by these scientists. A computational procedure was developed to determine the advisors' scientific ancestors using the Lattes Platform. These analyses provided a list of 1,997 researchers who were inspected through Lattes CV examination and allowed the identification of the pioneers of Brazilian protozoology. Moreover, we investigated the areas in which researchers who earned PhDs in protozoology are now working. We found that 68.4% of them are still in protozoology, while 16.7% have migrated to other fields. We observed that support for protozoology by national or international agencies is clearly correlated with the increase of scientists in the field. Finally, we described the academic genealogy of Brazilian protozoology by formalising the "forest" of Brazilian scientists involved in the study of protozoa and their vectors over the past century.
Brazilian scientists have been contributing to the protozoology field for more than 100 years with important discoveries of new species such as Trypanosoma cruzi and Leishmania spp. In this work, we used a Brazilian thesis database (Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel) covering the period from 1987-2011 to identify researchers who contributed substantially to protozoology. We selected 248 advisors by filtering to obtain researchers who supervised at least 10 theses. Based on a computational analysis of the thesis databases, we found students who were supervised by these scientists. A computational procedure was developed to determine the advisors' scientific ancestors using the Lattes Platform. These analyses provided a list of 1,997 researchers who were inspected through Lattes CV examination and allowed the identification of the pioneers of Brazilian protozoology. Moreover, we investigated the areas in which researchers who earned PhDs in protozoology are now working. We found that 68.4% of them are still in protozoology, while 16.7% have migrated to other fields. We observed that support for protozoology by national or international agencies is clearly correlated with the increase of scientists in the field. Finally, we described the academic genealogy of Brazilian protozoology by formalising the "forest" of Brazilian scientists involved in the study of protozoa and their vectors over the past century.
The last decade of the XIX century is considered to be the period in which experimental
protozoology began (Calkins 1911). At that time,
protozoa were suspected of being the causative agents of only two human diseases: dysentery
and malaria (Calkins 1911). Currently, protozoan
parasites are recognised as the causative agents of some of most important human illnesses.
For instance, amebiasis is the second leading cause of death due to parasitic diseases
worldwide and causes approximately 40-100,000 deaths per year (Moraes et al. 2015). Approximately 6.5 million people are estimated to
be infected with Trypanosoma cruzi, 1,300,000 new cases of leishmaniasis
occur every year, and 214 million new cases of malaria have occurred in 2015 alone.
Toxoplasmosis and giardiasis are also diseases caused by protozoa, both of which represent
significant public health threats (who.int). These are examples of protozoa that are of
medical interest and do not include protozoa of veterinary interest or free-living
protozoa, which may be important environmental markers.Therefore, protozoology has become a unique field of study, and an impressive amount of
work has gone into detailing the biological aspects of this subject. Indeed, the study of
protozoa has rapidly evolved from the molecular characterisation of eukaryotes through
host-parasite interactions and ecoepidemiological aspects to therapeutic interventions.
Several important mechanisms were first described in protozoa, such as nonconventional RNA
polymerase II promoter sites (Clayton 2002),
trans-splicing (Mayer &
Floeter-Winter 2012) and RNA editing (Simpson et
al. 2006). Some of these findings have been highly influential in other medical
and biological fields, such as the discovery of telomeres protecting chromosomes in
Tetrahymena (Blackburn & Gall
1978), the understanding of glycosylphosphatidylinositol protein anchor
structures (Ferguson et al. 1985, Ferguson 1999), and the delineation of the respective
roles of the T-helper (Th)1 and Th2 lymphocyte subsets against infectious agents in studies
using Leishmania major-infected mice (Heinzel et al. 1989).In Brazil, where some protozoan infections are endemic, these aetiological agents and their
vectors have attracted considerable interest from researchers and students. A few “founding
fathers” (pioneers) of this field of science have nurtured later generations of
protozoologists, resulting in the development of a solid network of 100 years of
scientists.The evolution of science is the pillar that provides a solid foundation for the development
of society by creating the means to face the challenges ahead (Cordova et al. 2015). The study of the origin of a scientific area and
the identification of the motives behind its development in new disciplines provide
important contributions to the understanding of future needs. This academic genealogy
allows the development of qualifying studies based on the training of new researchers.Academic genealogy was defined by Sugimoto (2014)as
a quantitative study of the intellectual heritage perpetuated through academic orientation
relationships among professors (i.e., mentors or supervisors) and their students. Various
questions can be answered by building an academic genealogy. Sugimoto (2014) proposed five types of academic genealogies: honorific,
egotistical, historical, paradigmatic, and analytical. These categories are not mutually
exclusive, and most academic genealogies can be classified into at least two of these
types.In this work, we followed the development of protozoology in Brazil using a historical and
paradigmatic approach. Systematic data collection was performed through the analysis of
formal thesis orientation and was organised to create a chain of mentorships, resulting in
the construction of our academic genealogy.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
In this work, the identification of researchers associated with protozoology who
influenced (supervised) other researchers over a 100 year timespan was performed through
seven processes (Fig. 1). The methodology was
based on the analysis of two sources of Brazilian academic information that allowed the
tracing of scholarly interactions among researchers.
Fig. 1
: diagram of the tracking of Brazilian protozoologists. Each block
represents a process and each arrow represents the information flow between
processes.
Process 1 - Identification of dissertations and theses related to protozoology
- A local repository extracted from the Coordination for the Improvement of
Higher Education Personnel (CAPES) thesis database (Mena-Chalco & Rocha 2014) was used in this process. We identified 10,456
dissertations or theses with at least one descriptor related to protozoology
(Supplementary Table I). This quantity
represented 1.7% of the 607,389 dissertations or theses registered in the local
repository.Process 2 - Identification of supervisors of Masters and PhD students in
protozoology - In this process, we extracted all supervisors’ names from the
dissertations/theses identified in process 1. The process handled incomplete or similar
names using approximate string matching. Two names were considered the same/similar if
the Levenshtein distance (Levenshtein 1966)
between them was equal to 2. This process allowed us to identify 4,176 researchers
related to the protozoology field.Process 3 - Identification of representative protozoologists in terms of the
quantity of supervisions registered in the CAPES thesis database - In this
process, researchers who supervised at least 10 projects were selected to generate a
list of 248 supervisors (6% of 4,176 researchers). This threshold was considered
suitable for manual inspection. Supplementary Table
II presents the complete list of names obtained through this process.Process 4 - Identification of ancestors of the representative
protozoologists - This process was performed recursively for each supervisor
identified in the Lattes Platform. First, the name of the supervisor was identified and
associated with its Lattes CV. Then, the same approach was undertaken for the
supervisors of the supervisors until the inability to identify a new supervisor was
reached. We identified 445 researchers as the ancestors of the 248 representative
protozoologists.Process 5 - Identification of the descendants of the representative
protozoologists - This process was accomplished by selecting the PhD
students (process 1) who were supervised by the researchers obtained in process 3. We
identified 1,335 direct descendants from the group of 248 representative
protozoologists.Process 6 - Construction of a scientist network - In this process, the
researchers identified in processes 3, 4 and 5 were used to generate a supervisor
network (i.e., a directed graph where each node represented a researcher, and the edge
represented the relationship between 2 researchers). Duplicated names were processed
manually. A list of 1,997 complete names was generated as the result of this process
(Supplementary Table III).Process 7 - Classification of protozoologists - This process was
performed by manual inspection of each researcher identified in the previous process.
Information from the protozoology field was associated with each of the 1,997
researchers using the Lattes Platform and academic repositories.
RESULTS
Identification of scientists actively working in protozoology - This
work aims to understand the past and present of Brazilian protozoology and the migration
of scientists from protozoology to other fields and from other fields to protozoology.
Academic dissertations and theses are an important source of information concerning the
growth and evolution of science (Andersen &
Hammarfelt 2011). Therefore, we accessed a data collection containing most of
the Brazilian protozoologists from the CAPES database combined with the Lattes
examination. By searching for the supervisors of actively working protozoologists, the
supervisors of these supervisors, and so on, we identified the pioneers of this field in
Brazil. Similarly, by searching for students trained by these actively working
protozoologists, we identified other people currently working in the field. To establish
the names of actively working protozoologists to nucleate our search, we prepared a set
of 60 words (descriptors) (Supplementary Table
I) for use as keywords to screen theses (Masters or PhD) present in the local
CAPES thesis database, which contained all theses completed in Brazil from 1987-2011
(Mena-Chalco & Rocha 2014). A total of
10,456 Masters or PhD theses contained at least one such descriptor. This number
corresponded to 1.7% of the total theses presented in the same period throughout all
fields. A total of 4,176 researchers supervised these 10,456 dissertations/theses. As
expected, the number of scientists diminished when we increased the number of works
supervised per researcher (Fig. 2). For
operational reasons, it might not be possible to analyse in detail all the 4,176
researchers (advisors) and the relevant factors considered in the adopted methodology.
Therefore, only researchers with at least 10 dissertations/theses supervised in the
field of protozoology were considered in our study (248 scientists) (Supplementary Table II). With a threshold of five or two
dissertations, for instance, the number of researchers increases by 276% (689
researchers) or 745% (1,864 researchers), respectively. With the threshold adopted,
important pioneers in the field of protozoology are included in the analyses, but we
recognise that this empirical value might penalise early career researchers. However, we
believe that this arbitrarily selected threshold of 10 dissertations/theses was
appropriate to define a selected group of representative researchers. A total of 36% of
these researchers are or were members of the Brazilian Society of Protozoology in the
period between 2000-2015.
Fig. 2
: relationship between the number of supervisors and number of theses
generated from 1987-2011 containing at least one descriptor. Supplementary
Table I containing 60 descriptors was used to screen the Coordination for the
Improvement of Higher Education Personnel database. The graph indicates how
many scientists supervised a different number of theses containing at least one
descriptor as a keyword.
Identification of Brazilian protozoologists - We used the complete list
of names in Supplementary Table II as a starting
point to search for the people supervised by these people and vice
versa (i.e., scientists who supervised these people). Using automated
analysis of the local CAPES thesis database, we found students whom these researchers
supervised (descendants). We did not search for students of these students because some
of them were still settling, which could compromise our analysis. Based on the automated
analysis of their Lattes CVs, we could also follow the advisors’ ancestors by searching
for their supervisors and the supervisors of these supervisors available on the Lattes
CV database (Fig. 1). As shown below, the analyses
also allowed the identification of Brazilian supervisors who worked outside of
protozoology and supervisors that were from other countries; thus, we could identify the
seeds of Brazilian protozoology. These analyses provided a list of 1,997 names that were
manually inspected through the Lattes CV examination, following the pathway shown
inFig. 3A. We used the following criteria to
establish that a researcher is/was working in the field of protozoology. Researchers
studying the biology of protozoa or protozoa-host interaction were considered
protozoologists. Additionally, scientists investigating protozoa vectors were considered
protozoologists. In contrast, researchers working with protozoa but investigating the
clinical aspects of diseases (e.g., mostly ophthalmologists, dermatologists, and
cardiologists who study diseases caused by protozoa) were not considered
protozoologists. From the total of 1,997 names found, some were not included in the
Lattes database. This discrepancy might have occurred for four different reasons: (i)
misspelling of names, (ii) people who are no longer in science, (iii) foreign
supervisors, and (iv) people who worked in protozoology before the Lattes CV was
created. To include this last group in our analysis, we searched for these people in the
CAPES database or in public repositories to identify their ancestors and the field in
which they worked. To include supervisors from other countries, we searched for these
people in PubMed to verify the field in which they work/worked. Finally, 10.86% of the
1,997 names could not be found in either the Lattes Platform, CAPES database, or public
repositories and were removed from the forward analyses. These analyses allowed the
classification of researchers into five different categories: (a) scientists who are
working or previously worked in protozoology in Brazil, (b) scientists working in
protozoology outside of Brazil who were advisors of Brazilians, (c) scientists who did
not work in protozoology during their PhD and did not establish a research interest in
this field but were advisors of scientists who migrated to protozoology, (d) people who
obtained their PhD in protozoology but were now involved in activities other than
science, and (e) scientists who developed their PhD in protozoology but established a
research interest in another field (Supplementary Table
III). The frequency of each group is presented in Fig. 3B. Based on the data, 907 names were identified as Brazilian
protozoologists (classified as group a).
Fig. 3
: classification of scientists according to Lattes CV. A: pathway followed
during inspection with Lattes CV; B: frequency of each category described in A;
a: scientists working or who worked in the past in protozoology in Brazil; b:
scientists working in protozoology outside of Brazil that were advisors of
Brazilians; c: scientists that did not work in protozoology during their PhD or
establish a research interest in this field but were advisors of scientists
that migrated to protozoology; d: persons who developed their PhD in
protozoology but are now involved in activities other than science; e:
scientists who developed their PhD in protozoology but established research in
another field.
Identification of Brazilian protozoology pioneers - To identify
researchers who were Brazilian protozoology pioneers, we first assumed that people who
were awarded a PhD in protozoology in Brazil were not pioneers but that the pioneers
would be their advisors. Therefore, we concluded that the pioneers were among the
scientists who were awarded PhD degrees in other fields and then migrated to
protozoology or people who were awarded PhDs in protozoology outside Brazil and then
came to our country to establish a group here. Among the researchers classified as group
a (Brazilian protozoologists), we manually searched the Lattes CV and the CAPES database
for ones who were (766) and were not (141) awarded a PhD in protozoology (Fig. 4, Supplementary Table IV). Additionally, we searched the Lattes CV for researchers
who were awarded a PhD in protozoology outside Brazil (15) (Supplementary Table V, in bold). Then, we determined in what year
these researchers who did not receive a PhD in protozoology (141 names) or who received
a PhD outside Brazil (15 names; a total of 156 names) established a protozoology group
in Brazil. For scientists who arrived from other fields, we searched the Lattes CV for
the year of their first paper published in protozoology (Supplementary Table V). For scientists who received their PhD
outside of Brazil, we searched the Lattes CV for the year in which they published their
first paper after their PhD from a position in Brazil (Supplementary Table V, in bold). Carlos Chagas’s paper describing
T. cruzi was not found in PubMed but was considered due to its
relevancy. Using this date as the year the scientist entered Brazilian protozoology, we
plotted a graph of this incoming year for each of the 156 scientists who arrived in
protozoology (Fig. 5A). Additionally, we plotted a
graph showing the frequency of this influx according to the year of migration (Fig. 5B). From both analyses, it was clear that there
were three waves of immigration into Brazilian protozoology: (i) up to and including
1974, (ii) between 1978-1993, and (iii) between 1998-2013. However, the drop observed
after 2013 might be artificial because the collection of data is recent. Thus, we
concluded that the pioneers (i.e., founders or precursors) of Brazilian protozoology
were the 20 scientists who migrated into the field up to 1974: Carlos Chagas, Samuel
Pessoa, Hertha Meyer, Zigman Brener, Wladimir Lobato Paraense, Leonidas Deane, Maria von
Paumgartten Deane, Amilcar Viana Martins, José Rodrigues da Silva, Washington Luiz
Tafuri, Erney Felicio Plessmann de Camargo, Jayme Neves, Aluízio Prata, Thales de Brito,
Astolpho Ferraz de Siqueira, Jeffrey Jon Shaw, Mario Endsfeldez Camargo, Isaac Roitman,
Raymundo Martins de Castro, and Walter Colli.
Fig. 4
: analysis of fields where scientists classified as developed their PhD.
Scientists classified in category “PhD in protozoology” were divided into those
who developed and those who did not develop PhDs in protozoology.
Fig. 5
: incoming scientists into protozoology. A: the graph shows the year in
which each researcher who did not develop a PhD in protozoology published their
first paper in this field. Red dots indicate the year that scientists who
developed a PhD in protozoology outside of Brazil published their first paper
in Brazil after their PhD; B: frequency of scientists immigrating into
Brazilian protozoology according to the year of arrival.
Migration of protozoology into Brazilian science - We also investigated
the immigration and emigration of scientists to and from Brazilian protozoology. A total
of 17.1% of the studied researchers immigrated into protozoology, based on the number of
people who entered protozoology from other fields and arrived from protozoology outside
of Brazil (156 names/907 total). Researchers who stayed in protozoology after their PhD
corresponded to 68.4% of individuals, based on the 770 protozoologists who received a
PhD in protozoology and were still acting as protozoologists, those who received a PhD
in protozoology and were involved in other activities but still involved in science
[group d: 167 (Supplementary Table III)], and
those who received a PhD in protozoology and established a group in another field [group
e: 188 (Supplementary Table III)]. Finally, we
determined the percentage of people who left Brazilian protozoology to contribute to
other fields of Brazilian science. To obtain this number, we divided the number of
people classified as group e in Supplementary Table
III (188) by the total number who received a PhD in protozoology. This
analysis demonstrated that protozoology provided 16.7% of its PhDs to other fields of
science.Academic genealogy of Brazilian protozoologists - Finally, we
constructed an academic genealogy (Fig. 6) that
included all names classified as protozoologists to reflect the scenario of protozoology
in Brazil. The resulting structure is a forest containing one tree for each scientist
who entered Brazilian protozoology. A detailed view of this academic genealogy is
available from professor.ufabc.edu.br/~jesus.mena/brazilian-protozoology-scenario/. It
is clear that protozoology expanded in the mid-1970s. It is also clear that protozoology
today consists of the descendants of the pioneers as well as other scientists who
migrated to protozoology and supervised their students in this field.
Fig. 6
: academic genealogy of Brazilian protozoology protozoologists (group a in
Fig. 3) were included in this graph. Each circle represents one researcher and
lines represent student-supervisor relationships. Persons identified as
pioneers are shown in red, persons directly influenced by pioneers (students or
students of their students) are shown in blue, and persons who arrived in
protozoology after the pioneers and their descendants are shown in green. The
x-axis shows the year of the conclusion of the PhD in protozoology or, for
those who did not receive a PhD in protozoology, the year that they migrated to
protozoology.
DISCUSSION
The analysis of the dynamics of Brazilian protozoology over the past century based on
database searches from 1987-2011 allowed us to track and identify scientists who made
important contributions by acting as the pioneers of this field. Moreover, we could
determine the percentage of scientists immigrating to protozoology as well as the
percentage of scientists who were supervised in protozoology but established a research
group in another field. The field of Brazilian protozoology comprises at least 907
researchers. Certainly, there are other protozoologists who were not covered by our
criteria and therefore were not included in our analysis. The interesting result is that
a large number of people working in this field are the result of the efforts of 20
pioneers who introduced protozoa as biological models or drug targets in the period
between 1909-1974. In a seminal paper published inMemórias do Instituto Oswaldo
Cruz, Carlos Chagas describedT. cruzi and thereby
introduced the study of protozoology in Brazil (Chagas
1909). Surprisingly, no descendants were identified for Carlos Chagas,
probably because his descendants were clinical doctors and therefore were not classified
as protozoologists according to the criteria used in this study. However, Carlos
Chagas’s work at the beginning of the previous century was so complete in showing the
causal agent of a disease and its relationship to an insect vector that it still
inspires researchers today.In the 1940s, Samuel Pessoa inaugurated his huge contribution to the field by studying
the behaviour of Leishmania in tissues (Pessoa & Barreto 1945) and the geographic distribution of phlebotomines
(Barreto & Pessoa 1946). Hertha Meyer
published on T. cruzi cultivation (Meyer & de Oliveira 1948); this field of study evolved to include her
contribution regarding the structural analysis of this organism. In the 1950s, the study
of protozoa in Brazil expanded with Amilcar Viana Martins, Leonidas Deane, and Maria
Deane, who investigated the epidemiology of leishmaniasis (Deane & Deane 1954, Martins et
al. 1956), Zigman Brener and Washington Luiz Tafuri, who contributed to our
understanding of Chagas disease (Brener 1952, de
Queiroz & Tafuri 1957), José Rodrigues da
Silva, who investigated hepatic problems related to Leishmania and
amoeba infections (da Silva & de Paola 1957,
daSilva & Torres 1957), and Wladimir
Lobato Paraense, who was interested in Plasmodium (Paraense 1952). Then, over the next two decades, a
new group of scientists migrated into protozoology. Their studies included the detection
and treatment of Trypanosoma,Leishmania,
Toxoplasma, andPlasmodium by Raymundo Martins de
Castro (Sampaio et al. 1971), Aluízio Prata
(Prata 1963), Mario Camargo (Camargo 1964b), and Thales de Brito (de Brito et al. 1962), the biology of trypanosomatids
by Walter Colli (Alves & Colli 1974), Erney
Camargo (Camargo 1964a), and Isaac Roitman
(Roitman 1969), and epidemiological approaches to studying diseases and hosts by Jeffrey
Shaw (Shaw & Lainson 1968), Jayme Neves
(Neves et al. 1961), and Astolpho Ferraz de
Siqueira (Barreto et al. 1963). These studies
concluded the first phase of Brazilian protozoology. The co-authors of the works cited
above certainly contributed to Brazilian protozoology and could be identified as
founders of Brazilian protozoology.The pioneers/founders, together with the students they supervised, nucleated the
Brazilian protozoologist network. Thus, the environment favouring the construction of
this field in Brazilian science was created. By supervising new students, organising
scientific meetings and working side by side with agencies to create programmes for
financial support, these scientists solidified the foundations of Brazilian protozoology
and allowed the influx of new scientists into this area.Immigration occurred in two waves. The entry of scientists between 1978-1993 might be a
consequence of the creation of the Integrated Program for Endemic Diseases (PIDE), which
was the Funding Programme from the Brazilian Council for Science Development (CNPq) that
operated between 1976-1986. This programme invested the equivalent of 12 million
American dollars in groups working in approximately 200 projects in endemic diseases
(Gonçalves et al. 1988). Due to its
differentiated financial policy, which means an initiative to influence the development
of a special area, the programme had a huge impact on attracting more groups to work in
protozoology, and our data reinforce this importance.The second wave of incoming scientists occurred after 1998 and might be the consequence
of the elevated number of fellowships and resources offered by the CNPq. In this sense,
national politics favoured Brazilian science, and protozoology took advantage of this
situation. However, we cannot forget the contribution of International Funding
Programmes such as the Tropical Diseases Research (TDR) of the World Health
Organization.By tracking students who completed their PhD in protozoology, we observed that 85% of
them were still involved with science. Considering that the other 15% might include
people who teach in private universities using the knowledge acquired during their PhD,
we can conclude that the resources invested in protozoology were very well returned to
society. However, it is time to reflect on whether the current number of students
completing their PhDs will be harnessed in Brazil as has occurred in the past.The scenario of protozoology in Brazil, as shown in Fig.
6, presents an increasing trend. Although the immigration dynamics presented
in Fig. 5 showed a possible decrease in interest,
Brazilian protozoology is the result of the work of pioneers and also (as evidenced by
the green dots in Fig. 6) the consequence of the
immigration of many scientists to protozoology who supervised their students in this
area. It is important to reinforce that this flux requires financial support or strong
funding programmes such as the PIDE and TDR.Our goal in this communication was to show the dynamics of protozoologists and the
impact of protozoology on Brazilian science. The same approach can be used to study
contributions in other fields. The use of different criteria can group people in various
ways to reveal other trees and identify other pioneers, even in protozoology. The
genealogy presented here is one of multiple possible methods to track our past and
hopefully point to our future.From Isaac Newton to Stephen Hawking, the idea of “having seen further by standing on
the shoulders of giants” has been used in science to recognise past mentors for new
discoveries. We expect that in addition to serving as a source for research on the
historical and paradigmatic aspects of Brazilian protozoology and positioning the
contributions of the field to Brazilian science, this paper may be seen as a form of
acknowledgement of the pioneering researchers who built the foundations of our work and
inspired new generations of protozoology.
TABLE I
Descriptors used to screen theses on Coordination for the Improvement of
Higher Education Personnel database
TABLE II
Scientists that supervised at least 10 theses/dissertations containing at
least one of the 60 descriptors present on Supplementary Table I
source: Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel
database in the period from 1987-2011.
TABLE III
Classification of names according to diagram in Fig. 3A
a: scientists working or who worked in the past in protozoology in Brazil;
b: scientists working in protozoology outside of Brazil that were advisors
of Brazilians; c: scientists that did not work in protozoology during their
PhD or establish a research interest in this field but were advisors of
scientists that migrated to protozoology; d: persons who developed their PhD
in protozoology but are now involved in activities other than science; e:
scientists who developed their PhD in protozoology but established research
in another field.
TABLE IV
Classification of names that developed (1) or not (2) PhD in
protozoology
bolded names: persons who developed PhD in protozoology having as supervisor
a nonprotozoologist.
TABLE V
Year that persons who did not develop PhD in protozoology published in this
field
a: the year that scientist published his first paper in
Brazil after his PhD; bolded names: persons who did develop PhD in
protozoology outside Brazil.
Authors: Lucélia Campelo Albuquerque Moraes; Eduardo Luzía França; Rafael Souza Pessoa; Danny Laura Gomes Fagundes; Mara Gil Hernandes; Victor Pena Ribeiro; Maria Aparecida Gomes; Adenilda Cristina Honorio-França Journal: Parasit Vectors Date: 2015-08-08 Impact factor: 3.876