In 1906, two scientists, Camillo Golgi and Santiago Ramón y Cajal, won the Nobel Prize for visualizing and drawing nerve cells.
Category Archives: Sheeva Azma
Best Practices for Informational Interviewing
You can use informational interviewing to get a job, change careers, or advance in your current role.
10 Simple Ways to Improve Your SciComm Skills
Learn a few easy ways to get started in science communication or SciComm in this post.
Can You Hack Your Own Brain?
Learn about “neurohacking” in this review of Elizabeth Ricker’s book, Smarter Tomorrow.
Tennis for More Than Two
Diversity in video games is profitable, but it is not catching up as fast as the evolving world. Why?
When it Comes to Communications, Scientists Can Learn a Lot from Policymakers
Learn about ways scientists can use political communications strategies to combat misinformation in the COVID-19 pandemic.
Understanding COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy for Effective Science Communication
Good science communication can reduce vaccine hesitancy in the COVID-19 pandemic.
Why Anti-Racism Efforts Start at Home
Read an opinion piece that Sheeva Azma pitched unsuccessfully to the MIT Technology Review about the events happening on Capitol Hill on January 6, 2021.
Journalism, Science, and Why It’s Good to Quit, Sometimes
Sheeva Azma talks about why it’s okay to quit things sometimes to make room for better stuff.
Why Isn’t Anyone Talking about The First Persian-American Ever Elected to Congress?
Read about Stephanie Bice, the first Persian-American in Congress.