Yang Ping asked a rather novel question, not to trouble his old classmate, but to test his true capabilities. However, He Zijian was able to answer it well, indicating that He Zijian, as always, spent most of his time reading and studying.
Yang Ping was very satisfied with He Zijian, and everything was noted by Director Wan of the Human Resources Office. In fact, no matter where it is, the intricacies of traditional culture are ubiquitous, just in different degrees.
The subsequent doctoral candidates were also quite impressive. This cohort's overall quality was indeed very high. The next interviewee was Tao Tianlei, formerly the top science student in Beijing, so he was ambitious, even arrogant.
When he met the interviewers, he completely lacked the humility seen in others, his gaze showed a dismissive expression. In fact, Yang Ping was only a few years older than them. He began by saying, "Before the interview, I hope I can offer some suggestions for your K Therapy. I wonder if that's acceptable."
Of course, he had the freedom to speak, and Song Zimo said, "Go ahead."
When Tao Tianlei spoke, his gaze was not on Song Zimo at all, but remained on Yang Ping. He came to the interview today to showcase his talents as well.
For this interview, he did his homework, carefully studying all the papers published by Yang Ping's team, and then discovered many shortcomings in their research. He had absolute confidence in addressing these issues, and felt that this team was no big deal, firmly believing the world was just a makeshift stage.
"Using adenovirus as a vector is obviously not a wise choice; it's an outdated mindset. In fact, the K Factor can be bio-encapsulated, using this faux-encapsulation to deceive the human immune system, allowing it to circulate with the blood throughout the body. Compared to transforming with adenovirus, this approach is simple and direct," Tao Tianlei said confidently.
Tang Shun listened intently, knowing that he had delved deep into K Therapy research and was considering various methods. However, his understanding was clearly lacking, and he lacked true comprehension of the relevant knowledge. His understanding level was still quite low, not even touching the doorstep of this topic.
"I hope Professor Yang can personally answer my question. I don't understand why the adenovirus vector method was chosen. Adenoviruses are unsuitable as carriers for this; they are suited only for oncolytic virus therapy. These two concepts are completely different." Tao Tianlei had also prepared a proposal, outlining his strategic vision for the entire experimental project, which he intended to hand to Professor Yang later, confident he could win his admiration this way.
"I'll answer this," Tang Shun said, because the question was too superficial for Professor Yang to address personally. As the laboratory director, he felt compelled to respond.
Tao Tianlei didn't dismiss Tang Shun. Tang Shun said, "You might have just graduated and don't know much about the field of tumor treatment. It's not just our K Factor; all drugs and biological agents for treating tumors face the greatest difficulty, which isn't the drugs themselves but ensuring they precisely reach tumor cells. What you know comes from papers, but there's much not written in those papers. We've endured countless trials in figuring out how to deliver them. You say encapsulating the factor alone is completely unworkable. What to use for encapsulation? When to unseal the encapsulation? How to ensure recognition of tumor cells while encapsulated? The laboratory environment outside the body is completely different from the human body."
Subsequently, Tang Shun introduced some of the latest theories and methods not yet available in papers. Tao Tianlei couldn't understand at all what Tang Shun was saying.
When a newcomer jumps straight to discussing strategic technology, it doesn't necessarily mean they're impressive; they simply haven't fully grasped the subject. They only understand the surface, like a middle schooler who thinks math is simple after finishing it, wondering why mathematicians spend generations solving certain problems.
Take the Pythagorean theorem, for example—how simple! Why did mathematicians think for so long? He understood it in just a few minutes.
That's the situation Tao Tianlei is in now. He doesn't realize the knowledge on the papers, about this topic, is the result of the experimental team's painstaking thought and experimentation.
It's like one engineer disassembling an entire aircraft engine to show another engineer, and the latter, after reading all the materials, says that the materials are simple—just swap a few around, and that's it, such a simple matter.
He doesn't know how long others have studied these material combinations and how much effort was put in. Without being told, he might never be able to figure it out. The hidden knowledge behind scientific research results far exceeds what's seen in the papers.
"Here's my proposal, take a look." Tao Tianlei took out his proposal, and as Tang Shun reached out to take it, Tao Tianlei handed it directly to Yang Ping.
Yang Ping, in order to show respect to the newcomer, patiently opened and looked at it. The so-called strategic and technical plan was actually very naive, not even touching the doorstep of the topic.
"I hope that once I join, I can directly lead the project team, having my own recomposed research funding and personnel selection authority," Tao Tianlei said arrogantly. If he were to come here as just an ordinary doctor or researcher, he definitely wouldn't agree. A genius like him must be utilized to significance. At his previous school, both his mentor and the school didn't value him; he came to Sanbo Hospital for significant utilization.
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