Speakers

  • Chris Mooney

    Position/Organization: contributing editor, Science Progress; senior correspondent, The American Prospect

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  • Gil Mor

    Position/Organization: professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences, Yale School of Medicine.

    Gil Mor, M.D., Ph.D., is a professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences at the Yale School of Medicine. In addition to his research on cancer progenitor cells, he also studies the interactions between the immune system and reproductive organs.

    http://medicine.yale.edu/obgyn/people/gil_mor.profile

    Gil.Mor@Yale.edu

    203-785-6294

  • Christie Nicholson

    Position/Organization: freelance; contributing editor, Scientific American

    Christie Nicholson is a multimedia science journalist based in New York. She is a contributing editor at Scientific American where she developed and launched an online community and helped launch two video series and two audio podcasts. Currently she produces and hosts the weekly podcast 60-Second Psych and produces 60-Second Earth. She is an on-air contributor to multiple Web and TV shows that have appeared on Slate, Discovery Channel and the Science Channel. A graduate of Columbia University's School of Journalism, she co-created the 'Science of Sex,' a Web site that won two Webby Awards.

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  • Eric R. Olson

    Position/Organization: audio-video editor, Nature Publishing Group

    Eric R. Olson is a producer, writer and correspondent, specializing in science and related topics. He has extensive experience shooting, editing and producing video and has worked for award-winning filmmakers in New York City and his hometown of Seattle. In the last several years, his work has appeared on the websites of LiveScience, Popular Science, Scientific American and the journal Nature. Eric graduated from the Science, Health and Environmental Reporting program at New York University in 2008.

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  • Ivan Oransky

    Position/Organization: executive editor, Reuters Health

    Ivan Oransky, MD, is the executive editor of Reuters Health. He also teaches medical journalism at New York University’s Science, Health, and Environmental Reporting Program, and is the treasurer of the Association of Health Care Journalists. He blogs at Embargo Watch. He has served as managing editor, online, of Scientific American, deputy editor of The Scientist, and editor-in-chief of the now-defunct Praxis Post. For three years, he taught in the health and medicine track at the City University of New York’s Graduate School of Journalism.

  • Stephen Ornes

    Stephen Ornes is a freelance science writer based in Nashville, Tennessee. He has covered a wide range of topics, including extrasolar planets for Discover, the mathematics of pizza slicing for New Scientist, Mercury's magnetic tornadoes for Science News for Kids, and tumor banking for CR. His first book, a young-adult biography of mathematician Sophie Germain, was published in 2008. "What Happens to a Donated Tumor?", a feature story from the summer 2009 issue of CR, was recently recognized by the Association of Health Care Journalists. He is also a fact-checker for CR magazine.

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  • Luba Ostashevsky

    Position/Organization: Macmillan Science

    Luba Ostashevsky is editor at Macmillan Science, a popular science imprint at Palgrave Macmillan that gives a voice and platform to top scientists and journalists. Recent titles include Second Nature by animal behaviorist Jonathan Balcombe that explores the inner lives of animals; The Power of the Sea by oceanographer Bruce Parker about monstrous waves and our millennial long struggle to predict marine behavior. Upcoming titles include a book on the connection between our emotions and sleep and a new story of our evolution by the curator of the anthropology wing at the AMNH.

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  • Jennifer Ouellette

    Position/Organization: freelance science writer

    Jennifer Ouellette is the author of three popular science books, most recently The Calculus Diaries: How Math Can Help You Lose Weight, Win in Vegas, and Survive a Zombie Apocalypse. Her work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Discover, Salon, Nature, Physics World, and New Scientist, among other venues. She maintains a group blog called Cocktail Party Physics, and also blogs about physics and space science for Discovery News.

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  • Annie Paul

    Position/Organization: freelance science writer

    Annie Murphy Paul is a magazine journalist and book author whose
    writing has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, The New York
    Times Book Review, Slate, Discover
    , and the Boston Globe Ideas
    section, among other publications. A former senior editor at
    Psychology Today magazine, she was awarded the Rosalynn Carter
    Fellowship for Mental Health Journalism. She is also the author of The
    Cult of Personality
    , a cultural history and scientific critique of
    personality testing that was hailed by Malcolm Gladwell in the _New

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  • John Pavlus

    Position/Organization: freelance writer/filmmaker, www.smallmammal.com

    John Pavlus has published in and created original video features for Scientific American, Popular Science, Nature, Wired, Slate.com, NPR, New York magazine, the New York Times Magazine, DVICE.com, io9.com, and others. He is the creative principal and co-founder of Small Mammal, an online video production company focusing on science and technology subjects, and has worked as a writer and associate producer on documentaries for National Geographic Explorer, NOVA ScienceNOW, and The Science Channel. He is a recovering GTD user.

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