Fifty years of impact on liver pathology: a history of the Gnomes

  • Michael Torbenson
  • , Valeer Desmet
  • , Helmut Denk
  • , Francesco Callea
  • , Alastair D. Burt
  • , Stefan G. Hübscher
  • , Luigi Terracciano
  • , Hans Peter Dienes
  • , Zachary D. Goodman
  • , Pierre Bedossa
  • , Ian R. Wanless
  • , Eve A. Roberts
  • , Elizabeth M. Brunt
  • , Andrew D. Clouston
  • , Annette S.H. Gouw
  • , David Kleiner
  • , Peter Schirmacher
  • , Dina Tiniakos

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Professional societies play a major role in medicine and science. The societies tend to be large with well-developed administrative structures. An additional model, however, is based on small groups of experts who meet regularly in an egalitarian model in order to discuss disease-specific scientific and medical problems. In order to illustrate the effectiveness of this model, the history and practices are examined of a long-standing successful example, the International Liver Pathology Group, better known as the Gnomes. The history shows that groups such as the Gnomes offer a number of important benefits not available in larger societies and nurturing such groups advances science and medicine in meaningful ways. The success of the Gnomes’ approach provides a road map for future small scientific groups.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)191-200
Number of pages10
JournalVirchows Archiv
Volume478
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2021

Keywords

  • History
  • Liver
  • Model
  • Pathology
  • Scientific group

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