Bioinformatics, a specialism propelled into relevance by the Human Genome
Project and the subsequent -omic turn in the life science, is an
interdisciplinary field of research. Qualitative work on the disciplinary
identities of bioinformaticians has revealed the tensions involved in work in
this “borderland.” As part of our ongoing work on the emergence of
bioinformatics, between 2010 and 2011, we conducted a survey of United
Kingdom-based academic bioinformaticians. Building on insights drawn
from our fieldwork over the past decade, we present results from this survey
relevant to a discussion of disciplinary generation and stabilization. Not only
is there evidence of an attitudinal divide between the different disciplinary
cultures that make up bioinformatics, but there are distinctions between the
forerunners, founders and the followers; as inter/disciplines mature, they face
challenges that are both inter-disciplinary and inter-generational in nature