When Peter Agre won the Nobel Prize in聽Chemistry in 2003, his mother was concerned he should not 鈥渓et it go to his聽head鈥.
Roald Hoffmann (chemistry, 1981) got the life-changing call from Stockholm when he聽was fixing his bicycle. Richard Ernst (chemistry, 1991), sleeping on a plane from Moscow to New York, was woken up聽by the captain and ushered into the cockpit to speak to the Nobel Committee over the radio. Roger Tsien (chemistry, 2008) was so sure he hadn鈥檛 won that he took a聽sleeping pill but then had to give a press conference in the middle of the night. Kary Mullis (chemistry, 1993) was warned people would be phoning him all day 鈥 and so聽went surfing.
Such details emerge from聽Nobel Life: Conversations with 24 Nobel Laureates on their Life Stories, Advice for Future Generations and What Remains to be Discovered,聽a forthcoming book by Stefano Sandrone, an Italian neuroscientist who is now a senior teaching fellow at Imperial College London.听
Some subjects explore how early experience can shape a scientific career. In the book, Mr Mullis, who died in 2019, recalled making a rocket that blasted a frog a mile into the air. Professor Ernst built himself 鈥渁 hood in the basement of the house, but it was much too small to catch all the exhaust from my experiments. Several times, I聽had to flee from the upper storeys to聽survive.鈥
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Daniel Kahneman (economics, 2002) wasn鈥檛 sure whether he became a psychologist as 鈥渁聽result of my early exposure to interesting gossip, or whether my interest in gossip was an indication of a budding vocation鈥. It might be a good thing, he reflected, if the general standard of gossip were 鈥渕ore psychologically informed鈥 because 鈥渋f聽we anticipate intelligent gossip, we鈥檙e going to act better than if we anticipate unintelligent gossip鈥.
The book includes much vivid detail about the human side of science.
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Fran莽oise Barr茅-Sinoussi (physiology or medicine, 2008) described the depression she experienced when she 鈥渟aw [HIV] patients in terrible, awful conditions, dying from the disease on which I聽was working鈥s a human being, it was a very painful experience. As a scientist, it was very stressful because I聽felt responsible for trying to find a solution as fast as possible. But as we know, science takes its time. There was a discrepancy between my feelings as a human being and my feelings as a scientist.鈥
Professor Barr茅-Sinoussi admitted to the kind of single-mindedness that meant her fianc茅 had to call her in the lab to make sure she attended their wedding celebrations. But Professor Hoffmann advised young scientists to avoid being 鈥渢aken over by science鈥 and to 鈥渢ake as many courses in the humanities and arts, and in foreign languages, as you can鈥, so as to 鈥渄evelop an appreciation for the moral, social and artistic aspects of our life. Chemistry is easy; being human is聽not.鈥
Professor Tsien, who died in 2016, suggested that 鈥渋t鈥檚 important in science to pick projects that give one some sensual pleasure, which in my case means pretty 鈥 even gaudy 鈥 colours. In my first successful science experiments, calcium imaging, the rainbow of computer pseudocolours, representing low to high calcium concentrations, was motivated by my aesthetic preferences. The compulsion to fill the spectrum of fluorescent proteins from violet to infrared came from the same place.鈥
For Sir Tim Hunt (physiology or medicine, 2001), the key to success was 鈥渇inding a problem that鈥檚 both interesting and soluble鈥. Science, he suggested, was 鈥渓ike walking into a foggy landscape. You can鈥檛 make anything out clearly. When the fog lifts, you can see a tree here and a bush there, and it becomes obvious which way to go. But the fog always descends again. It鈥檚 about this moment of clarity that is treasurable, and it comes along every, let鈥檚 say, 10聽years or something like that.鈥
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Even Professor Agre鈥檚 mother was eventually impressed by his achievements.
His research into aquaporins was used by Christian Dior to develop a new skincare product, advertised in a French beauty magazine with a picture of 鈥渁聽beautiful blonde young woman with water dripping on her cheek鈥. When he showed the photograph to his mother, she smiled and said: 鈥淧eter, I聽think you are finally doing something useful!鈥
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