<p>Are there areas for extra stuff that you could send? Like let’s say for example you do research - rather than just putting “did research” on your resume, if you got a publication or some sort of other written final product (the latter of which i have as the product of clinical research), can you send it with your applications also and bring it with you to interviews to facilitate discussion?</p>
<p>Unless you’re MD/PhD, no one (reviewer or interviewer) is going to waste his time reading your publication. Just list the publication and it’ll be enough. I’m sure you’ve noticed by now, professors are very self-absorbed. They’re interested only in their own research.</p>
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Unlike medical students.</p>
<p>But enough about me, let me tell you how this affects me…</p>
<p>it’s not really a typical type of journal publication, it’s hard to explain - it’s basically instructions for and rationale behind a neuropsychological battery of tests i created for stroke patients, and i could include the actual tests with me in the interview - i understand that if it were a hard scientific publication (abstract, statistics, discussion, etc.) it would be tedious to read, but i think this would be easy to understand and a cool discussion topic especially during the interview</p>