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Does winning a Nobel prize make you less productive? Do you get ‘Nobelitis’? Here’s what it did to me | Paul Nurse

There’s something to the notion that Nobel winners create less thereafter. But it is life-changing, and it truly helps to get things done

Twenty-two years ago, I was in a room in London talking about setting up a museum to celebrate the monk Gregor Mendel, the founder of genetics. Someone came in and gave me a note from my lab saying I should turn on my mobile phone. A heavily distorted message had been left, and it sounded like a journalist asking me for comments on the Nobel prize in medicine, which he said had been awarded that day to my friend Tim Hunt. I listened to it again and then a third time. Was he also saying I had won it too? I returned to the room and said something that in retrospect must have sounded very strange: “I must go now because I think I may have won a Nobel prize.” It was true, I had won it, together with Tim and Leland Hartwell, a scientist from Seattle, for our work on how cells control their division.

The prize changed our lives. It is the one scientific prize everyone knows. Suddenly you become a public figure being asked to do all sorts of things: to give lectures, quite often on topics you know little about; to sit on committees and reviews you are not always well qualified to be on; to visit countries you have barely heard of; to sign endless petitions on what are probably good causes, but you never know. It is like having a whole new extra job, with upwards of 500 requests a year. It is impostor syndrome on steroids.

Sir Paul Nurse is director of the Francis Crick Institute and chancellor of the University of Bristol. He was awarded the Nobel prize for physiology or medicine in 2001 and the Royal Society Copley medal in 2005

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