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    • Philip Campbell, Editor-in-Chief, London

      Phil is responsible for the editorial content and management of Nature, as well as the long-term quality of all Nature Publications. He has a BSc in aeronautical engineering from the University of Bristol, a MSc in astrophysics from Queen Mary and Westfield College, University of London, and a PhD in upper atmospheric physics from the University of Leicester.

    • Alison Abbott, Senior European Correspondent, Munich

      Alison has been with Nature in Germany since 1992, covering a variety of scientific topics, mostly in biology. Alison gained her first degree and PhD, both in pharmacology, at the University of Leeds. After a period of post-doctoral research, she spent seven years as editor of Trends in Pharmacological Sciences. As our resident culture vulture, Alison edits the Science in Culture column in Nature's Books and Arts section.
      a.abbott@nature.com

    • Ananyo Bhattacharya, Deputy News Editor (online), London

      Ananyo started as online editor of Nature News after a stint as deputy editor of Chemistry World. His first break in journalism was as a reporter for Research Fortnight, where he was also news editor. Ananyo has a degree in physics and a PhD in protein crystallography. After post-doctoral work in San Diego, he returned to London in 2003 bored with sunshine, beaches and affordable housing. Jack of all trades and master of none, he finds that science journalism suits him perfectly.
      a.bhattacharya@nature.com

    • Geoff Brumfiel, Senior News Reporter, London

      Since 2002, Geoff has written for Nature on everything from nuclear weapons to science and faith. Prior to working at Nature, Geoff wrote for New Scientist, ScienceNOW, and Physical Review Focus, among others. He contributes occasionally to public radio shows including Marketplace and Science Friday. Geoff holds a double-degree in physics and English from Grinnell College in Iowa, and a master's in science writing from John's Hopkins University. In 2007, he moved from Nature's Washington bureau to London, where he now covers physics, space, and policy from a European perspective.

    • Declan Butler, European Correspondent, Paris

      Declan's interests include science in France, global health, science and development, computing, electronic publishing and space science. Before joining Nature in 1993, Declan wrote freelance, and worked for the French biotechnology magazine Biofutur. He graduated in biology from Queen's University, Belfast, and has a PhD in marine biology from the University of Leeds. He was made a Chevalier of France's National Order of Merit in 2003 for service to science and society.
      d.butler@nature.com

    • Erika Check Hayden, San Francisco Biomedical Correspondent

      Before joining Nature's staff in late 2001, Erika worked for Newsweek magazine, reporting on science, health and news events, including the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks in New York. She now writes on a variety of subjects in biomedical research and related policy, including controversial areas such as bioterrorism, cancer diagnostics and the therapeutic potential of psychedelic drugs. Erika earned her undergraduate degree in biology from Stanford University in California.
      e.check@us.nature.com

    • Daniel Cressey, Blog Editor and Reporter, London

      Daniel joined Nature to run the Great Beyond blog after spending two years covering medical developments for doctors' newspaper Pulse. Before this he wrote about science and policy for Research Fortnight after a studying at four different universities in five years. He has degrees in Chemistry, History of Science and Journalism.
      d.cressey@nature.com

    • David Cyranoski, Asian-Pacific Correspondent, Tokyo

      David had worked in Japan for several years before moving into journalism with Nature in 2000. His varied employment history includes translation for a semiconductor-manufacturing equipment company and teaching history to foreign exchange students. In addition to covering the Asian-Pacific region, David's interests encompass materials, Earth science and intellectual property.
      d.cyranoski@natureasia.com

    • Rex Dalton, US West Coast Correspondent, San Diego

      Rex's interest in scientific misconduct has earned him the unofficial title of Crime Correspondent. Officially, he's been Nature's west coast representative since 1999, covering topics including palaeontology, anthropology and the Earth sciences. Over the course of a 25-year career, Rex has reported extensively on local US politics. Before joining Nature, he covered medicine for the San Diego Union Tribune. Rex graduated in business and public administration from the University of Arizona and completed a master's degree in journalism at the same institution.
      rexdalton@aol.com

    • Natasha Gilbert, Reporter, London

      Natasha joined Nature in September 2008 as a news reporter covering biology, ecology and science policy. She previously worked at the Guardian writing news and features on higher education. Before that she was news editor of Research Fortnight. Natasha has an MSc in philosophy of science from the London School of Economics and a BSc in environmental biology from Reading University.
      n.gilbert@nature.com

    • Eric Hand, Reporter, Washington

      Eric fell in love with journalism late, after an early start teaching at a London boys' school and programming car navigation software. He studied civil engineering at Princeton University, and later picked up master's degrees in geography and geophysics from the University of Cambridge and Stanford University. He joined Nature in 2007 after writing for the Oregonian, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. His reporting has ranged from crime in Ozark hills to biotechnology in east Africa. He maintains an outsize interest in Scrabble, which he feels is the perfect game.
      e.hand@us.nature.com

    • Heidi Ledford, Reporter, Boston

      Heidi writes about biology and medicine for the online news team, and has a PhD from the University of California, Berkeley. Although her degree is technically in plant biology, her allegiances lie more with algae than plants and she's of no use at all for gardening advice. Heidi has written for the Oregonian, edited for the Berkeley Science Review, and freelanced for a few other places while working in the lab. But she has now put away her pipettes to work full time for Nature.
      h.ledford@us.nature.com

    • Corie Lok, Research Highlights Editor, Boston

      Corie has been with Nature for four years. She first joined as an assistant editor with Naturejobs. She was the senior editor of Nature Network before becoming the editor of Nature's Research Highlights section. She's also worked for MIT's Technology Review and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (radio) and has a master's degree in science journalism from Boston University. When not reading papers and editing 120-word summaries of them, she can be found curling in the winter and dragon-boat paddling on the Charles River in the summer.
      c.lok@boston.nature.com

    • Brendan Maher, News Features Editor, Philadelphia and New York

      Brendan officially joined Nature in April 2009 after freelancing for the magazine for two years editing features and commentaries. Prior to that, he was a senior editor for The Scientist. He has been writing and editing life science news for more than eight years, and revels in the joys of long-form journalism. Photo: varneyphoto.com.
      b.maher@us.nature.com

    • Emma Marris, Retained correspondent, Missouri

      Emma joined Nature in March of 2005, after a six-month stint as an intern, and began working as a contributing correspondent in September 2007. She has a master's in science writing from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, and a bachelor's in English from the University of Texas, Austin. She covers conservation, biology, energy, agriculture, and film, among other things, and edits Research Highlights once a month.
      e.marris@us.nature.com

    • Richard Monastersky, News Features Editor, Washington, DC

      Richard joined Nature in 2008, writing and editing features on geosciences, climate, environment and other gloomy topics. Prior to that, he was a reporter and editor at The Chronicle of Higher Education and he covered earth sciences at Science News magazine. In more than two decades as a journalist, he has reported science stories from every continent and won several awards. On weekends, he can be seen on local fields impersonating a soccer coach, with mixed success.
      r.monastersky@us.nature.com

    • Helen Pearson, Chief Features Editor, New York

      Helen joined Nature in 2001 as an online reporter. She now edits biology features for the magazine and writes on all aspects of biomedical science. Helen has a degree from the University of Cambridge, a PhD in genetics, a few journalism awards and a taste for adventures in far-flung destinations.
      h.pearson@nature.com

    • Mark Peplow, News Editor, London

      This is Mark's second stint at Nature, having spent 2004-2006 as an online news reporter covering physical sciences. After spending a couple of years as the editor of Chemistry World magazine, he rejoined Nature in July 2008, first as online news editor and then as news editor. Mark has a PhD in organometallic chemistry.
      m.peplow@nature.com

    • Katharine Sanderson, Reporter, London

      Katharine reports on the physical sciences for Nature. She has a degree in chemistry from Imperial College London and a PhD in organometallic chemistry from Cambridge University. Before joining the Nature news team in 2006, and branching out beyond chemistry, she edited features and reported news for the Royal Society of Chemistry's magazine Chemistry World. In 2005 Katharine was named 'new business features journalist of the year' by the Periodicals Publishing Association.
      k.sanderson@nature.com

    • Quirin Schiermeier, German correspondent, Munich

      Since 1999, Quirin has written for Nature about science and related policy in Germany, the European Union, Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. He is particularly interested in climate, oceanography, fisheries and the Earth sciences. Before joining Nature, Quirin worked as a cartographer. He graduated in geography, statistics and economics from the University of Munich.
      q.schiermeier@nature.com

    • Kerri Smith, Podcast Editor, London

      When she's not presenting and putting together Nature's podcasts, Kerri writes mostly about neuroscience, and sometimes about other bits of biology for the online news team. She joined Nature as an intern in 2006 after completing an MSc in science communication at Imperial College London. In 2005, she won the New Scientist's science essay competition, and whilst at Imperial she wrote bits and bobs for New Scientist and The Times. Kerri has a degree in human sciences and another MSc, this time in neuroscience, from the University of Oxford.
      k.smith@nature.com

    • Jeff Tollefson, Reporter, Washington

      Jeff came to Nature from Congressional Quarterly, where he covered energy, climate and the environment for two years. Before that he was a Knight fellow in science journalism at MIT; a science reporter at the Santa Fe New Mexican, where he covered Los Alamos and the national labs among other topics; and a general assignment reporter at the Billings Gazette for which he covered Yellowstone National Park. Jeff has won a number of accolades, including New Mexico press awards for pieces on pollution and nuclear-weapons work at Los Alamos National Laboratory. He is originally from Wyoming and has studied French and Russian.
      j.tollefson@us.nature.com

    • Richard Van Noorden, Assistant News Editor, London

      Richard joined Nature in January 2009, after two years as a reporter and editor at Chemistry World. He has a masters degree in Natural Sciences from the University of Cambridge and enjoys philosophy of science, chemistry, crosswords and comedy.
      r.vannoorden@nature.com

    • Meredith Wadman, Retained correspondent, Washington

      Meredith reported her first Nature story - on gene therapy - in December 1995, fresh from a stint covering Capitol Hill and White House politics as Washington correspondent for The Oakland Tribune. She has a BSc in human biology from Stanford University, studied medicine as a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford, and went to journalism school at Columbia University in New York. Meredith has also contributed to the Washington Post, The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal.
      m.wadman@us.nature.com

    • Mitch Waldrop, Editor for Editorials, News Features Editor, Washington

      Mitch joined Nature in February 2008. Along the way he earned a PhD in elementary particle physics; worked as a staff reporter for Chemical & Engineering News and Science magazines; wrote several books, including Complexity and The Dream Machine; and even worked as a media officer for the National Science Foundation. He loves big, loud science fiction movies, and cycles to work every day.
      m.waldrop@us.nature.com

    • Alexandra Witze, Chief of Correspondents and print news editor, Washington

      Alex joined Nature in May 2005 from the Dallas Morning News, where she worked as a science writer for nine years. In the course of reporting she has traveled to an ice camp at the North Pole, an ocean-drilling vessel in the Pacific, and an ancient Maya city in the Guatemalan jungle. She has a bachelor's degree in geology and the urge to hike past rocks whenever possible.
      a.witze@us.nature.com

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