
My motto is 鈥榚nthusiastic serendipity鈥. There are lots of opportunities that come our way and the trick is to be sufficiently aware to see them.
Nicola Clayton FRS FSB FAPS C Psychol is the Professor of Comparative Cognition in the Department of Psychology and a Fellow of Clare College. In addition to her research and teaching, she is a dancer, specialising in tango and salsa, and Scientist in Residence at Rambert, a contemporary dance company.
My motto is 鈥榚nthusiastic serendipity鈥. There are lots of opportunities that come our way and the trick is to be sufficiently aware to see them.
Serendipity can put you in the right place at the right time, but you also need enthusiasm to take advantage of a situation. If you鈥檙e constantly running yourself ragged and feeling very overwhelmed, the opportunities could knock you in the face and you still might not notice them. It鈥檚 about putting yourself in the right frame of mind to be able to look, listen and be receptive. And sometimes that means taking risks.
A good example of this was when I joined the creative team at the Rambert Dance Company to work on a new piece in honour of Charles Darwin鈥檚 200th anniversary. It all came from a chance remark at a New Year鈥檚 party, which led to me being introduced to Mark Baldwin, their Artistic Director, and we鈥檝e been collaborating ever since. It鈥檚 fascinating work that combines my twin loves of dance and science and it came about by pure happenstance; but I still had to be open to it. Similarly, I went out on a limb in doing an unusual lecture at the Royal Institution on mental time travel with my tango partner, Clive Wilkins, who is an artist and writer. Working together we were able to bring elements of dance, magic, art, writing and science into our presentation. In both instances I could have avoided the risk of doing something different but I didn鈥檛: after all, what鈥檚 the worst that can happen? Divergence, creativity and innovation are all exciting places for me.
鈥My favourite tango moves are the ones where I feel I鈥檓 flying and that carries through to my intellectual life.鈥
Movement is really what I鈥檓 all about. My favourite tango moves are the ones where I feel I鈥檓 flying and that carries through to my intellectual life. I鈥檝e always been fascinated with birds, with how they move and how they perceive the world. I feel as if I am quite birdlike and I definitely have wings; just because you can鈥檛 see them doesn鈥檛 mean I haven鈥檛 got them! Movement and birds are the two things that unite everything I do. I don鈥檛 separate or compartmentalise my dance life from my academic life; I鈥檓 not a university professor one day and a tango dancer the next. It鈥檚 about taking very disparate disciplines and interweaving them in a way that allows you to see things in new or unexpected ways.
I鈥檝e always tried to think a bit differently and not follow a regular model. It got me into a lot of trouble when I was younger. As a postdoc I didn鈥檛 dress conventionally and I remember going for junior research fellowship interviews in my high heels and little mini-skirt. At that stage of my career I felt that I wasn鈥檛 taken seriously and was seen as a little blonde lass from Blackpool who looked more like a dancer than a scientist. It meant the some people dismissed me and it was only when I wore a more conventional outfit that I got a position.
Back then I found it quite hard to find female role models, although I think that鈥檚 much easier now. When I was an undergraduate, there simply didn鈥檛 seem to be that many female professors. I struggled with how to get the right balance between being a very girly girl 鈥 because that鈥檚 what I am 鈥 whilst also being seen as seriously committed to my work. When I observed most of the high-ranking women at the 探花直播, the way they looked and the way they came across just wasn鈥檛 me. Looks aren鈥檛 important in themselves, except as a manifestation of your personality and I wanted to be true to myself.
鈥淚 also got to do the splits on the red carpet at the Royal Society when I was awarded my FRS!鈥
I felt liberated when I became a Fellow of the Royal Society. I鈥檓 not any more sensible than I was twenty years ago, but now I鈥檝e got a stamp of approval and with it comes a lot of freedom. I also got to do the splits on the red carpet at the Royal Society when I was awarded my FRS! It was an honour and it mattered enormously to me but it鈥檚 dangerous to go swanning around thinking that I鈥檓 important and I don鈥檛 mean any of this in an arrogant way. 探花直播real value of an FRS is it demonstrates that I meet the highest external standards and therefore people trust me when I want to try out something unconventional. It鈥檚 a fast track to being able to explore more divergent ideas.
What鈥檚 success? I want to be able to play. This sounds trivial but it isn鈥檛 meant to be. It鈥檚 a privilege and pleasure to be able to play with ideas and it鈥檚 about freedom not status. If I am a role model in any way, I hope it鈥檚 in showing that people can be successful by being themselves and there isn鈥檛 just one way to do things. I don鈥檛 like to be prescriptive and I certainly wouldn鈥檛 want anyone to think that they need to dress like me or be like me. I want to encourage them to try and tailor-make their lives so that they spend their time doing the things they really enjoy.