Interview Ciara Groß

In­ter­view with our Ap­pli­ca­ti­on Spe­cia­list: Cia­ra Con­way

Wel­co­me to our la­test edi­ti­on of our se­ries Em­ployee In­ter­views, whe­re we dive into the per­so­nal ex­pe­ri­en­ces, chal­lenges, and in­sights of our team mem­bers. Meet Cia­ra, our Ap­pli­ca­ti­on Spe­cia­list, and learn more about her per­spec­ti­ves on her field of ex­per­ti­se.

If you had un­li­mi­t­ed re­sour­ces, what ground­brea­king idea would you work on?

If I had all the re­sour­ces and time at my dis­po­sal, I would work so­le­ly on stu­dy­ing the in­ter­ac­tions of out­side to­xins on the hu­man body and how it can lead to de­bi­li­ta­ting out­co­mes. I would do this by pro­vi­ding peo­p­le with free per­so­na­li­zed me­di­cal test­ing and free third par­ty test­ing of the pro­ducts they use dai­ly or have been ex­po­sed to. Here, we can bring tog­e­ther lab work and ma­chi­ne lear­ning to give peo­p­le the ans­wers they need wi­t­hout drai­ning them of time and mo­ney.

How of­ten do you come across ex­ci­ting dis­co­veries that turn out not to be eco­no­mic­al­ly fe­a­si­ble?

All the time. My en­ti­re PhD is ar­gu­ab­ly a se­ries of dis­co­veries that are not eco­no­mic­al­ly fe­a­si­ble and of­ten be­ne­fit the fun­da­men­tals of the field in­s­tead of the ap­pli­ca­bi­li­ty. I per­so­nal­ly think it’s that tech­no­lo­gy has­n’t caught up yet to make the­se fun­da­men­tal dis­co­veries eco­no­mic­al­ly fe­a­si­ble.

Which cur­rent tech­no­lo­gi­cal de­ve­lo­p­ment will most stron­gly ch­an­ge the way you con­duct re­se­arch in the co­ming ye­ars?

Any at­mo­sphe­ric pres­su­re io­niza­ti­on tech­ni­que. I think once I was ex­po­sed to a tech­no­lo­gy that could be ad­apt­ed to al­most all my ide­as in the lab, the­re’s no way I could go back to do­ing re­se­arch the way I used to. I never thought I’d wil­lingly go back into the lab af­ter do­ing a de­gree in bio­in­for­ma­tics, but this type of tech­no­lo­gy con­vin­ced me I can be a good lab sci­en­tist and a good co­der and bring my skill set tog­e­ther in a co­he­si­ve man­ner.

What unu­su­al or crea­ti­ve me­thods do you use to dri­ve in­no­va­ti­on?

I read sci­ence fiction/fantasy books and I knit com­pul­si­ve­ly. Most of my in­spi­ra­ti­on for in­no­va­ti­on or ide­as co­mes to me while I’m re­a­ding or when I’m sit­ting the­re mind­less­ly ma­king a swea­ter. It’s just put­ting my brain in a sta­te of calm­ness whe­re so­me­thing just pops in my head out of nowhe­re.

What has been the most ex­ci­ting “aha” mo­ment in your care­er – and what came out of it?

Rea­li­zing that start­ing over is­n’t al­ways a set­back in the long run. So­me­ti­mes to achie­ve a par­ti­cu­lar goal we have to be wil­ling to tear down and re­build parts of our li­ves from the ground up. It’s this mind­set that al­lo­wed me to lea­ve the US and pur­sue a care­er in Ger­ma­ny. So I would say I’m in a pret­ty good place now.

From yarn to ions, Cia­ra shows us that wea­ving pa­ti­ence and cu­rio­si­ty tog­e­ther can crea­te so­me­thing tru­ly ground­brea­king.

Thank you for sha­ring your va­luable in­sights and ex­pe­ri­en­ces with us. We’­re ex­ci­ted to con­ti­nue our jour­ney of #Rethin­king mass spec­tro­me­try tog­e­ther.