Multidisciplinary Session

MS 12 - From curiosity to impact: shaping the next generation of clinical radiology researchers in multidisciplinary teams

Lectures

1
Chairpersons' introduction

Chairpersons' introduction

01:00Marion Smits, Rotterdam / NL, Marc Dewey, Berlin / DE

2
From the reading room to research: realities, challenges and strategies

From the reading room to research: realities, challenges and strategies

05:00Ann-Christine Stahl, Berlin / DE

3
From disciplines to collaboration: learning research across boundaries

From disciplines to collaboration: learning research across boundaries

05:00Patrick Tang, Rotterdam / NL

4
Closing remarks. From supervision to sustainability: mentoring research teams

Closing remarks. From supervision to sustainability: mentoring research teams

03:00Marion Smits, Rotterdam / NL

5
Panel discussion: From curiosity to impact: learning research in teams across career stages

Panel discussion: From curiosity to impact: learning research in teams across career stages

40:00Panel discussion: From curiosity to impact: learning research in teams across career stages

1 min
Chairpersons' introduction
Marion Smits, Rotterdam / Netherlands
Marc Dewey, Berlin / Germany
1 min
Opening: nobody is perfect, but a team can be
Marc Dewey, Berlin / Germany
  1. To understand why modern radiology research relies on mentoring, supervision and interdisciplinary teamwork rather than individual excellence alone.
  2. To recognise research as a natural extension of clinical radiology practice and a means to actively shape technological innovation.
  3. To encourage early-career radiologists to adopt a collaborative mindset when considering research careers.
5 min
From the reading room to research: realities, challenges and strategies
Ann-Christine Stahl, Berlin / Germany
  1. To identify practical pathways for integrating research into early radiology careers, particularly in cardiovascular imaging and AI.
  2. To recognise common challenges in transitioning towards academic research and strategies to address skill acquisition and career uncertainty.
  3. To understand the value of interdisciplinary collaboration in developing clinically relevant and translational imaging research.
5 min
From algorithms to application: the data science side of imaging research
Kenrick Schulze, Berlin / Germany
  1. To understand how clinical questions in imaging are translated into data-driven and AI-based models.
  2. To appreciate the importance of validation, robustness and interpretability for clinical applicability of AI methods.
  3. To recognise the necessity of close collaboration between radiologists and data scientists for meaningful imaging research.
5 min
From disciplines to collaboration: learning research across boundaries
Patrick Tang, Rotterdam / Netherlands
  1. To explore how multidisciplinary collaboration enables research at the interface of radiology, radiotherapy and technical innovation.
  2. To understand the challenges and opportunities of working across different scientific cultures at early career stages.
  3. To recognise the role of young researchers as integrators and communicators within interdisciplinary research teams.
3 min
Closing remarks. From supervision to sustainability: mentoring research teams
Marion Smits, Rotterdam / Netherlands
  1. To understand the role of mentoring relationships in developing sustainable and effective research teams.
  2. To recognise how structured supervision and active mentor–mentee interaction support early-career researchers in complex environments.
  3. To appreciate mentoring as a collaborative, non-hierarchical component of successful imaging research.
40 min
Panel discussion: From curiosity to impact: learning research in teams across career stages

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