About Jenny
By day: cell biologist at UCL. By night: novelist, broadcaster, science writer, sci-lit-art pundit, blogger and Editor of LabLit.com. I blog about my life in science, not the facts and figures.
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- rpg on In which we struggle: mental health in higher education
- Jennifer Rohn on In which no scientist is an island – but that’s what we signed up for
- Henry Gee on In which no scientist is an island – but that’s what we signed up for
- Brigitte on In which sadness serves a purpose
- rpg on In which we tell a story: on metaphors in science and life
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Author Archives: Jennifer Rohn
In which the Italians also pass muster
Following on from the ingenuity of our French post-doc, the ante has recently been upped by the lab’s Italian contingent. Continental shelf A cheap solution for all your live microscopy needs Feast your eyes on this little beauty. Necessità was … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
19 Comments
In which an anniversary passes unremarked
This past Friday, though I didn’t realize it until well after midnight, marked my completion of a full year back in the lab. Time, as it always seems to do these days, has sped by more quickly than I would … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
26 Comments
In which I admire an act of ingenuity
Biomedical research is a costly business. You don’t really get a visceral understanding of just how costly until you become the principal investigator on a hefty source of funding and start monitoring your own balance sheet. You can easily drop … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
42 Comments
In which I appreciate a good geeky metaphor or two
What, you may ask, is a rainy bank holiday weekend good for? I’ve have plenty to do in my self-inflicted rota of Purgatory extracurricular tasks, such as preparing the next issue of LabLit, giving my novel one final polish before … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
127 Comments
In which I lose control of my vocabulary
Can being a writer actually make you a less efficient scientist? For the past few months I have been knee-deep in a high-throughput RNAi screen for pathways that affect cell shape and the actin cytoskeleton. Automated image analysis has come … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
78 Comments
In which I am amazed by rare things
Sometimes works of the past can reach out across the centuries and speak directly with a timelessness and universality that their creators never dreamt they’d inspire. Still life Old natural history drawings continue to resonate Yesterday I attended an RSA … Continue reading
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6 Comments
In which I feel the womanly force
Back in the days when my hair was longer, my blood hotter and my T-shirts, more tie-dyed, I used to be a rampant feminist. I earned my undergraduate degree at Oberlin College, which my fellow Americans will recognize as one … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
149 Comments
In which I deconstruct the publication process
Everyone seems to be writing papers at the moment. The other day in the office, two of my labmates were sitting at a computer, thrashing through the proto-Results section of their jointly first-authored magnum opus. In such close quarters, the … Continue reading
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128 Comments
In which a discovery is retrospectively chased but not quite captured
The history of our fair profession is riddled with stories. First and foremost are the journal articles themselves, which seek – in their own characteristically arid way – to describe an incremental advance and thereby place it into the context … Continue reading
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56 Comments
In which I rhapsodize over my instruments
If you are not an absolute geek, look away now. As for the rest, have any of you ever visited the Royal Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh? I first had the pleasure one summer long ago when I ran away … Continue reading
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129 Comments

