Past Recipients | 2018

Congratulations to the recipients of the 2018 EurekAlert! Fellowships for International Science Reporters, sponsored in part by the Rockefeller University Press. Five early-career journalists from China, India, and for the first time, the Balkan region, were selected by an independent panel of judges. The Fellows attended the 2018 AAAS Annual Meeting in Austin, Texas, USA February 15-19, 2018.

Vijay Shankar Balakrishnan (@VijaySciWri)

Freelance | India

Vijay Shankar Balakrishnan is a journalist, writer, and podcaster from India. Currently, he freelances from Marburg, Germany, covering science, environment, health, and development for international outlets such as The Lancet Infectious DiseasesNature BiotechnologyNew Scientist, SciDev.Net, and The Scientist. Before launching his career in journalism, Balakrishnan earned an interdisciplinary science PhD from Aarhus University, Denmark. After a brief internship at the now-defunct magazine, Lab Times, he freelanced for two years before earning an M.A. in Science Journalism from City University, London. For his Indian audience, Balakrishnan has reported on the booming diabetes and insomnia epidemics in his homeland for Scroll.in, and on research by Indian scientists for Nature India. For the WHO Bulletin, he wrote about the transgender health issues in India and abroad, as well as on dementia care in India and other developing countries. Balakrishnan has won the Novozymes Crystal Ball Challenge at the EU conference of science journalists in Denmark for his science fiction short story. He has also voiced an audio guide to an art module on climate change created by the Spanish-American digital artist Yolanda Del Riego. Balakrishnan is also an entrepreneur, creating podcasts about books by launching BookPodia. In his spare time, he enjoys cooking, singing, hiking, doing yoga, and watching films along with his scientist wife.

 

Xiaoxue Chen (@tobescarlett)

The Intellectual | China

Xiaoxue Chen is a science editor at The Intellectual (知识分子), a WeChat-based news outlet headquartered in Beijing, China. With a strong passion in science journalism, she mainly covers neuroscience and paleoanthropology. Her reporting about gene-editing generated significant impact in the scientific and greater communities in China. One of her follow-up stories on a gene-editing tool called NgAgo and its reproducibility problem was awarded China's Annual Investigative Reporting Award in 2017. She was recently invited to speak about her experience at the 10th World Conference of Science Journalists in San Francisco. Before entering science journalism, Chen wrote business stories, sold sports gear and apparel, and worked at a crayfish restaurant. She graduated from Zhengzhou University with a Bachelor's degree in English Literature and received her Master's in International Journalism from Beijing Foreign Studies University.

 

Haonan (Simon) Liu (@Lets_jam77)

Caijing | China

Haonan (Simon) Liu is a journalist at the Chinese financial magazine Caijing, where he writes about technology. His focus includes artificial intelligence, big data industry, and intelligent healthcare. In only his second year as a science journalist, he monitors the technical and market profiles of artificial intelligence and intelligent healthcare in both China and abroad. Using his investigative and analytical skills, Simon is striving to bring first-hand science reporting to Chinese readers.

 

 

Julianna Photopoulos (@juliannaphos)

Freelance | Greece

Julianna Photopoulos is a freelance science journalist based in Greece. Her writing has appeared in BBC EarthNew ScientistChemistry World, and The BMJ. She has also produced and presented the award-winning radio program Vértice in Mexico and been involved in numerous film productions for the BBC's Natural History Unit and The Royal Institution of Great Britain. She holds a Bachelor's degree in biology and Master's in both developmental genetics and science communication. In her spare time, she enjoys working on direct science engagement projects, including science festivals and events. Since 2015, she has served as the Web Producer and Editor for both the Athens and Thessaloniki Science Festivals.

 

Aayushi Pratap (@aayushipratap)

Hindustan Times | India

Aayushi Pratap is a health correspondent for Hindustan Times. She lives and works in Mumbai, India's most populous city, allowing her to explore governmental and social responses to some of the most urgent public health issues facing its citizens. Notable work in the past two years includes coverage on drug-resistant tuberculosis, dengue deaths, government responses to HIV/AIDS prevalence, and mental health disorders, especially depression. Her special interests lie in assessing the impact of public health policies on the daily lives of people. Her background in of biochemistry fuels her keen interest in staying abreast with the latest scientific developments in laboratories across the city. She hails from Baroda, a city with a long-standing tradition in fundamental research.

 

Read moreFirst science journalists from the Balkans, App-only news outlet among 2018 EurekAlert! Fellows

2018 EurekAlert! Fellowship Judges

Malathy Iyer is a senior editor (health) with The Times of India, Mumbai, with over 20 years of experience. When not chasing the big outbreaks of bird flu and swine flu, or tracking the emergence of total drug-resistant tuberculosis, she focuses on issues of urban health care systems and women and children with special needs.

Milica Momčilović has been a science journalist since 2006. She is currently a journalist, editor and TV anchor. She covers life sciences, medicine, health, climate change, and more. Momčilović is also a science correspondent at POLITIKA, the oldest and the most influential daily newspaper in Serbia and the Balkan, for which she writes on science, medicine, and health. Since 2016, Momčilović is the editor and anchor of "The New Technologies in Education" program on Radio Television of Serbia (RTS), a public broadcasting service, organized in partnership with the British Council in Serbia that aims to raise awareness on the significance of using new technologies in education to help modernize the teaching and learning process. Before that, she was the editor of Cafe Scientific, a TV-forum to debate science issues, and of FameLab, the world's leading science communication competition. Next to that, she has interviewed various national and international scientists, science communicators, and activists, such as Richard R. Ernst, Prof. Venki Ramakrishnan, and John Ellis. Momčilović was recently elected vice-president of The World Federation of Science Journalists and is a board member of the Balkan Network of Science Journalists, a regional network of professionals from Balkan countries.

T V Padma is a Delhi-based science journalist, who has written extensively on and science policies in India, South Asia and developing countries. She currently writes for NatureNature IndiaNew ScientistPhysics WorldChemistry World, BioWorld and The Wire. Padma began her career as a science correspondent at the Press Trust of India, where she reported on science daily and handled the production of the fortnightly PTI Science Service bulletin. She later ran development communication projects at the South Asia office of Panos Institute. In 2005, she joined SciDev.Net as its first South Asia Regional Coordinator to set up the first South Asian network of science writers. She was part of SciDev.Net's award-winning team in 2005 that won the Association of British Science writers (ABSW) prize for best science reporting on the web, for their coverage of the Dec 2004 Asian tsunami. She is also a recipient of the FAO's World Food Day prize for best reporting on health and nutrition issues in India.

Jane Qiu is a globetrotting science writer from Beijing, regularly contributing to NatureScience, Scientific American, and The Economist. She is currently a fellow of the Knight Science Journalism Fellowship Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, MA in the 2017-18 academic year. A recipient of many prestigious fellowships and travel grants, she has covered a wide range of topics from the Arctic, the Antarctic, and the peaks of the Himalayas. She is passionate about the Tibetan Plateau and surrounding mountain ranges -- a vast area half the US landmass known as the Third Pole because it boasts the largest stock of ice on Earth outside polar regions -- and strives to highlight its increasing fragility and pressing environmental issues. Her writings have won awards from the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Association of British Science Writers, the South Asian Journalists Association, and the Asia Environmental Journalism Awards.

Zixue Tai joined the media arts and studies faculty at the University of Kentucky in 2007. He teaches courses in multimedia and interactive game development, global communication, telecommunications policy and regulation, and other courses examining the interplay of new media and society. Previously, he taught at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (SIUE) and Shanghai International Studies University (SISU). His research interests focus on global communication with a special emphasis on the transformation of Chinese media in the new millennium. His research has appeared in journals such as International Communication GazetteJournalism & Mass Communication QuarterlyNew Media & SocietyJournal of Communication. He is the author of The Internet in China: Cyberspace and Civil Society (Routledge, 2006). Prof. Tai holds a doctorate in mass communication from the University of Minnesota - Twin Cities, a Master of Software Systems from the University of St. Thomas (Minnesota), and an MA from Shanghai International Studies University.

Mićo Tatalović is a Knight Science Journalism fellow at MIT. Before that he was an editor of New Scientist's environment and life sciences news section. He previously worked on the news desk of SciDev.net, helping to coordinate a global network of science journalists reporting from South America, Africa, and Asia, as well as freelancing for a wide range of science magazines. He is chairman of the Association of British Science Writers, and sits on the board of the Balkan Network of Science Journalists.