From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English author
Hannah Devlin is an author in London and science correspondent for
The Guardian .
Education
Devlin attended
St Bede's College, Manchester , where she studied A-Levels in Maths, Physics, French and General Studies.
[2] She completed an undergraduate degree in physics at
Imperial College London in 2004
[2] She has a
Doctor of Philosophy degree in
functional magnetic resonance imaging from the
University of Oxford for research supervised by
Peter Jezzard .
[1]
[3]
[4] In 2006, whilst Devlin was a DPhil student, she worked for
The Times on a
British Science Association Media Fellowship.
[5] She began her career as a journalist whilst completing her postgraduate studies.
[6]
[7] She was a finalist for the Young Science Writers award.
[8]
Career
Devlin worked for
Research Fortnight for a year, before getting a permanent job at
The Times in 2009.
[2]
[9]
[10]
In 2015, Devlin was appointed to The Guardian .
[11] She works as the science correspondent for The Guardian ,
[12] as well as presenting their podcast Science Weekly.
[13]
[14]
[15] Devlin has also written for the journal
Science .
[16] In 2017 she gave a keynote talk at the Human Tissue Association's annual conference.
[17] She has been shortlisted for the 2017
The Press Awards Science Journalist of the Year.
Devlin is an advocate for
women in science .
[18] In 2011 she chaired a debate with
Athene Donald ,
Ottoline Leyser and
Keith Laws called Women of science, do you know your place? .
[19]
[20] She has contributed opinion pieces such as Why don't women win Nobel science prizes?
[21] and Why are there so few women in tech? The truth behind the Google memo .
[22]
References
^
a
b Devlin, Hannah (2008).
Physiological variability in functional magnetic resonance imaging . bodleian.ox.ac.uk (DPhil thesis). University of Oxford.
OCLC
757052157 .
EThOS
uk.bl.ethos.496847 .
^
a
b
c
"Interview with Hannah Devlin" . thescientific23.com . Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^
"Former Students and Post Docs — Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences" . www.ndcn.ox.ac.uk . Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^
"What is FMRI? — Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences" . www.ndcn.ox.ac.uk . Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^
"The Fellows" . British Science Association . Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^
" 'Clean' car exhausts that emit toxic gases" (PDF) . Glasgow University . 16 April 2007. Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^
"Behind the web of lies" . timeshighereducation.com .
Times Higher Education . 1 June 2007. Retrieved 2 March 2018 . (subscription required)
^ Highfield, Roger (21 August 2007).
"Shining a light on a world of complexity" .
ISSN
0307-1235 . Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^ Administrator.
"Dragons' Den - UK Conference of Science Journalists" . www.ukcsj.org . Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^
"Women's Health Archives - A Room of Our Own" . A Room of Our Own . Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^
"Media Updates" . Vuelio . 5 February 2015. Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^ Devlin, Hannah (24 July 2018).
"Academic writes 270 Wikipedia pages in a year to get female scientists noticed" .
The Guardian . London. Retrieved 24 July 2018 .
^
"Hannah Devlin" . the Guardian . Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^ Weekly, The Guardian's Science.
"The Guardian's Science Weekly – Podcast" . Podtail . Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^
"Dr Hannah Devlin - Oxford Talks" . talks.ox.ac.uk . Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^
"Hannah Devlin" . Science | AAAS . 14 January 2015. Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^ Human Tissue Authority (HTA) (18 July 2017),
Hannah Devlin - HTA conference 2017 'Conversations around death and dying' , retrieved 2 March 2018
^
"Hannah Devlin - Media Masters" . Media Masters . 13 April 2017. Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^
"Women of science, do you know your place?" . Research Blogs . Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^
"Different is OK, but inequality is not" . 10 August 2007. Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^ Devlin, Hannah (6 October 2017).
"Why don't women win Nobel science prizes?" . the Guardian . Retrieved 2 March 2018 .
^ Devlin, Hannah; Hern, Alex (8 August 2017).
"Why are there so few women in tech? The truth behind the Google memo" . the Guardian . Retrieved 2 March 2018 .