 I've written a couple, I think, three or four manuscripts as a single author. The first one I did right after my master's program, I wrote as a single author. I had advice from a valued mentor who said it's not a bad idea to show other folks that you're capable of doing independent work, independent research. I've written some other articles a solo. One was a research article. Those tend to, though, be more group focused because almost always you have someone who's helping you actually implement the project or someone who's helping you with more advanced statistical analysis. But I wrote one on human factors engineering and how you might incorporate that in the hospital setting. So again, it wasn't a research article, but it was based on some work that I had done in a hospital and I thought would be kind of a good template on how I could use these hard-wiring factors to reduce the chance of adverse outcomes. So that one, again, I was single author because it was just a conceptual idea that I had that I took from beginning to end. I think with some of my single author papers, such as my first paper that I did that was a result of coursework, which in that case really was work that I'd completed independently. I think there are advantages and disadvantages. I think more often when you work as a research team, the advantage is that you have lots of people to bounce ideas off. You're not the only one who's responsible for all of the writing and all of the implementation. And I think when you, especially for folks that work with students, PhD students or doctoral students or even undergrad or graduate, it's nice to include students if they carried us, had a role in that manuscript, whether it was that they helped collect the data or they helped with some of the preliminary analysis or whatever. So I think research projects tend to be more group-focused, but I also think there's a place for individual authorship. You know what? If you want to see it through to completion, identify someone who can help hold you accountable to doing that otherwise, it's very easy to have other things take the place of your writing time. So do you have someone who can, you know, maybe you want to develop an assignment that's you're going to have to do as part of a course anyway, turn that into a paper? Well, use your faculty member as a resource. There's chances our faculty are usually very delighted and supportive to see their students, you know, move their work beyond just something that was turned in. As a single author, I know that I'm responsible for it. I don't have to wait for anybody else to get their work to me. I mean, the benefit for that is that you're on your timeline and you can expedite things because it's important to you. It's a priority to you.