To a large extent this project involves specialized knowledge about the immune system, and that’s stuff which you just have to look up one way or the other. That part is pretty straightforward. Same with looking up random jargon; that’s a part of any biology research.
The harder part is the not-very-legible general intuitions about biological systems—e.g. things like “a <25 amino acid peptide isn’t likely to have any function as a protein in its own right” or “error bars are on a log scale, and probably wide”. If you want to acquire those sorts of intuitions, one relatively-fast path might be the bionumbers book.
On the other hand, even without those intuitions you could just brute-force your way through by checking everything. For instance, if you don’t have the intuition that error bars are wide and on a log scale, you could find a paper experimentally measuring the concentration tolerances for chitosan nanoparticle formation. In some ways that’s better—you’re less likely to miss things and you can end up a lot more confident in your assessment—but it’s a lot more work.
That’s a tough question.
To a large extent this project involves specialized knowledge about the immune system, and that’s stuff which you just have to look up one way or the other. That part is pretty straightforward. Same with looking up random jargon; that’s a part of any biology research.
The harder part is the not-very-legible general intuitions about biological systems—e.g. things like “a <25 amino acid peptide isn’t likely to have any function as a protein in its own right” or “error bars are on a log scale, and probably wide”. If you want to acquire those sorts of intuitions, one relatively-fast path might be the bionumbers book.
On the other hand, even without those intuitions you could just brute-force your way through by checking everything. For instance, if you don’t have the intuition that error bars are wide and on a log scale, you could find a paper experimentally measuring the concentration tolerances for chitosan nanoparticle formation. In some ways that’s better—you’re less likely to miss things and you can end up a lot more confident in your assessment—but it’s a lot more work.