I have many questions about being an academic effective altruist, and very few answers, maybe others have those.
If you too have questions, some of them may be answered here:
https://80000hours.org/career-guide/top-careers/profiles/valuable-academic-research/
https://80000hours.org/topic/careers/in-research/academic-research/
If not, let's talk about them on the comment section and bootstrap our academic effectiveness.
What field are you studying? It seems like biology, but not sure. I'm planning on applying to programs in economics. Interested in cause prioritization and studying the interplay of social networks with economic decisions. Interested in seeing the decision you make.
Biological Anthropology, with an adviser whose latest book is in philosophy of mind, the next book on information theory, the previous book on - of all things - biological anthropology, and most of his career was as a semioticist and neuroscientist. My previous adviser was a physicist in the philosophy of physics who turned into a philosopher of mind. My main sources of inspiration are Bostrom and Russell, who defy field borders. So I'm basically studying whatever you convince me makes sense in the intersection of interestingly complex and useful for the world. Except for math, code and decision theory, which are not my comparative advantage, specially not among EAs.