“I think that you can find amazing people everywhere. People might appear different at first, or you might have a stereotype in your mind, but then you find wonderful people. It doesn’t matter where you go. It’s reassuring sometimes.”

Catarina Saiote

That’s a good thing for Catarina Saiote, postdoctoral research associate in the School of Medicine at the University of Minnesota. She lived in a lot of places prior to coming to the University for postdoctoral work: she was born in Lisbon, Portugal; received her PhD in Germany; moved to New York City to begin her postdoctoral work, and her most recent move brought her to Minnesota. “Why am I always moving north?” she quipped.

Catarina works in the Department of Neurosurgery. When I asked how she chose this field, she said, “I was curious about the brain early on, definitely in high school, though I probably wasn’t thinking ‘Oh, I’m going to do research about the brain!’ I find memory so interesting, you know, how it ties in to who we are. I think it’s the memory aspect that took me to brain work. The brain always seems to have a little bit of mystery around it.”

Catarina’s research originally involved using neuroimaging in surgery patients with multiple sclerosis. As different opportunities arose for postdoc assignments, she shifted her focus to epilepsy and Parkinson’s disease. Catarina uses neuroimaging methods (MRIs, EEGs, and intracranial recordings) and biomarkers to help improve surgery outcomes. She explained that, in her work, a biomarker is something that indicates a change, and can be measured before and during surgery, directly from the brain of the patient. She said the techniques are always changing because of research (“The Center for Magnetic Resonance Research here on campus is an amazing hub!”) so she’s always looking at what can be done with the new techniques and how they can be useful in the clinical setting.  

I asked if, should she move again to a new location, might her focus of research change to another set of symptoms or diseases? “No, but not for lack of interest, she said, “as I’m very curious about other applications. If I moved away from epilepsy and Parkinson’s though, it would end up being a break in my career path and expertise, especially at the early stages. If you keep changing your study topic it becomes hard to build a network and track record.”

Catarina’s path to involvement in University Senate governance started when she joined the University of Minnesota Postdoctoral Association (PDA). Participating in the PDA allowed her to meet people in this new setting, widen her circle of acquaintances outside of the research lab, and advocate for changes that she and other postdocs felt could benefit their situations at the University. Through PDA she learned about University Senate governance and that there were positions on several University Senate committees for postdocs. She eventually was appointed  to the Senate Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure.

“I find it’s really interesting to be involved, to better understand what goes on around you, to have a say in it, as you represent another group.” She said usually postdoc training is meant to prepare people to become faculty, where, all of a sudden, they are expected to participate in governance and service but it wasn’t something that was required of postdocs. “So how do you build this interest and experience? Being on a committee as a postdoc is a good stepping stone. I like being involved in the University and learning how a higher education machine works.” 

I asked Catarina if she had any hobbies, fully expecting her to say she simply didn’t have time for them. Instead, she told me about an article she had read recently that described how vital it is for people in academia to have hobbies. “In academics and research, the cycle for working on a project and completing it is such a long, long cycle. So it’s important to have hobbies that you can complete in a shorter amount of time, with tangible, almost immediate results.” Catarina said that hobbies are like a reset button for her. She loves to read, and to watch movies at the theater because she enjoys “being in the zone” with the rest of the audience. She recently began knitting, too. When asked what her favorite book is, Catarina said it would be so difficult to choose. She asked, “Well, can I pick The Lord of the Rings Trilogy? I know it’s three books but can it count as one? It captures so many things that I enjoy.”

Maybe one of the reasons Catarina finds amazing people everywhere is because of how she looks at the world, and the people in it. As she negotiates the interesting spaces where methodology and clinical settings overlap, she returns again and again to the idea of the mysterious brain. “The brain is always a little mysterious,” Catarina mused. “Maybe we just don’t know what the mysteries are yet.”