From where I stand


Chris McCabe

June 24th, 2010

The New Optimists finishes in the company of Chris McCabe inside his air-conditioned laboratory looking out on the struggle between weeds and bureaucracy as the year moves from winter towards summer.

And in this connection between the personal and the universal we touch on something at the heart of the collection, a sense of playing a part in a much bigger story.

Professor Chris McCabe‘s area of expertise is in Endocrine Cancer, researching mechanisms of thyroid, breast and colorectal tumourigenisis. He is a senior editor of Endocrine-Related Cancer, and on the Science Committee for the Society of Endocrinology. In his spare time, he writes forensic thrillers as John MackenDirty Little Lies (2007), Trial by Blood (2008), Breaking Point (2009) and Control (2010) – having previously published five novels under the name John McCabe (Stickleback, Paper, Snakeskin, Big Spender and Herding Cats).

Novels under the Microscope is an interview of Professor McCabe by LabLit while he was on a NESTA Dreamtime Fellowship in 2005.

david jones

June 10th, 2010

Professor David Jones‘ interest in muscle fatigue began some thirty years ago. But it was only a few years ago, he realised that most of what he believed about it was actually wrong — and a new understanding was made. Scientists, after all, change their minds in the face of new evidence.

In his Introduction to The New Optimists, editor Keith Richards uses David’s essay — which appears in Chapter 9: From where I stand — as an exemplar of what drives scientists:

“In his entertaining contribution, David Jones explains how his work on muscle fatigue followed a particular line of enquiry for 30 years, but ‘always with a slight nagging doubt’. Then a series of experiments revealed to him that he and his colleagues had been fundamentally wrong for all that time. Writing off 30 years work would plunge most mortals into deep denial or drive them into the arms of a convenient therapist, but David is a scientist — he became very excited!”

Professor Jones’ interest in muscle fatigue started when he was working at the Postgraduate Medical Centre at Hammersmith some thirty years ago, after he’d studied Medical Biochemistry as an undergraduate at the University of Birmingham, and obtained a PhD from the Institute of Psychiatry in London.

Today, with Emeritus Professorships at both the University of Birmingham and Manchester Metropolitan University, his current research interests are fatigue during exercise (with applications for both improving athletic performance and helping patients with exercise intolerance) and the stimulus for muscle growth. He also has an interest in the genetic basis for differences in the response in training between subjects.