WIRED
- November 2022: “The Amyloid Debate Has No Easy Answers for Alzheimer’s Scientists”
- October 2022: “A Huge New Data Set Pushes the Limits of Neuroscience”
- August 2022: “For Some Patients, Long Covid Symptoms Mask Something Else”
- August 2022: “The Psychology of Inspiring Everyday Climate Action”
- July 2022: “Gender-Affirming Care Improves Mental Health—and May Save Lives”
- June 2022: “Want to Understand Delusions? Listen to the People Who Have Them”
- December 2021: “Did Climate Change Make That Freak Weather Even Worse?”
- September 2021: “The Llama, the Hamster, and a New Path for Covid Treatment”
- September 2021: “Richard Lewontin Leaves a Legacy of Fighting Racism in Science”
- August 2021: “Without Code for DeepMind’s Protein AI, This Lab Wrote Its Own”
- July 2021: “Dogs, Unlike Wolves, Are Born to Communicate With People”
- June 2021: “A New Way to Understand the Brain’s Intricate Rhythm”
- February 2021: “As More Women Enter Science, It’s Time to Redefine Mentorship”
- January 2021: “For Marginalized Groups, Being Studied Can Be a Burden”
- December 2020: “An AI Used Facebook Data to Predict Mental Illness”
- November 2020: “Ancient Dog DNA Reveals Their Enduring Connection With People”
- October 2020: “18,000 Years From Now, People Will Still Play Football”
- September 2020: “WIRED25 Day 3: Look at Problems in a New Way”
- September 2020: “Anthony Fauci Has Some Very Good Reasons to Be Optimistic”
- September 2020: “Mental Health in the US is Suffering—Will It Go Back to Normal?”
- August 2020: “What Virtual Reality for Flies Teaches Us About Human Vision”
- August 2020: “A Radical New Model of the Brain Illuminates Its Wiring”
- August 2020: “Solve the Covid-19 Testing Crunch, Win $5 Million”
- August 2020: “The WIRED Guide to Crispr”
- July 2020: “A Study Finds Sex Differences in the Brain. Does It Matter?”
- July 2020: “Llamas—Yes, Llamas—Could Help Us Fight Covid-19”
- July 2020: “Covid Kills More Men Than Women. Experts Still Don’t Know Why”
- June 2020: “Scientists Taught Mice to Smell an Odor That Doesn’t Exist”
- June 2020: “FDA Revokes Hydroxychloroquine’s Emergency Use Authorization”
Slate
- September 2022: “Could Brain Scans Bring Psychiatry Into the 21st Century?”
- May 2022: “Could Monkeypox Bring a New Wave of Homophobia?”
- May 2022: “The Pros and Cons of Giving People COVID for Science”
- January 2022: “Can Weed Protect You From COVID?”
Spectrum
- November 2022: “How Helen Willsey broke new ground, frogs in hand”
- February 2022: “Searching for the biology behind autism’s sex bias”
- July 2021: “Patchwork mutations present a new frontier for autism research”
- June 2021: “Pandemic pressures may drive young scientists away from autism research”
- June 2021: “After 60 years, scientists are still trying to crack a mysterious serotonin-autism link” (received a Regional Gold Award from the Azbees)
- May 2021: “Family approach yields new autism-linked genes”
- May 2021: “Autism mutation may cause big brain via ‘don’t eat me’ signals”
- May 2021: “Autism-linked protein screen reveals hundreds of new interactions”
- May 2021: “Fetal brain scans may forecast autism traits in toddlers”
- May 2021: “New ranking system flags clinically relevant ‘autism genes’”
- April 2021: “Neuron ‘skeleton’ may explain impact of autism-linked gene mutation”
- April 2021: “Community Newsletter: Female protective effect, genetic risk factors, identity-first rejection”
- March 2021: “How to safeguard online data collection against fraud”
- March 2021: “Communication struggles may explain aggression in some autistic boys”
- March 2021: “Innate stress response may link maternal infection to autism”
- March 2021: “New statistical method may spare lab animals”
- March 2021: “Brain activity jump-starts autism-linked genes in human neurons”
- February 2021: “Genetic variants in protein target sites may contribute to autism”
- February 2021: “New tool captures dynamic changes in decision-making”
The Open Notebook
- May 2021: “Fat Chance: Writing about Probability”