Jennifer Ouellette is an American science writer and editor.
Career
Ouellette's website describes her as a "recovering English major who stumbled into science writing quite by accident as a struggling freelance writer in New York City."[1] According to her husband, physicist Sean M. Carroll, Ouellette was hired by the American Physical Society "after they found out that it was easier to teach physics to people who knew how to write than to teach writing to people who knew physics."[2]
Ouellette was the founding director of the Science & Entertainment Exchange,[3] an initiative of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) designed to connect entertainment industry professionals with top scientists and engineers to help the creators of television shows, films, video games, and other productions incorporate science into their work.[4]
The National Academy is hoping to basically foster this current trend in television and get more interactions between science and Hollywood, in the hopes of changing the way science and scientists are portrayed. [...] We want Hollywood to basically help us inspire people and to get them interested in science and in rationalism so that they then go on to read more and become more educated.[5]
She also served as a Journalist in Residence at the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics in 2008[6] and worked in New Mexico with the Santa Fe Science Writing Workshop as an instructor in 2009.[7]
Until September 2015, she wrote a blog for Scientific American titled Cocktail Party Physics,[19] where she and other female contributors chatted about the latest science news: "You just tell entertaining stories and weave the science in and it’s a way of getting people familiar and interested in what is normally kind of a scary subject for them."[5] In 2015, Ouellette became senior science editor at Gizmodo.[19]
In 2018, she joined Ars Technica as a contributor.[20] As of 2024[update] she is a senior writer for the site.[3]
———— (2010). The Calculus Diaries: How Math Can Help You Lose Weight, Win in Vegas, and Survive a Zombie Apocalypse. Penguin Books. ISBN978-0143117377.
Accepting her Humanist of the Year award at the AHA's 2018 conference, Oullette spoke of her brother's struggle with and death from cancer, saying medical professionals should not "hide behind euphemisms and platitudes" that hinder end of life decision making, and about patients' need for frankness and honesty about their prognosis.[23] She spoke about the suffering due to the limitations of the medical profession's current understanding of pain management and the need for research, and about her support for right-to-die legislation.[23]
^The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson. Episode 7–106. February 11, 2011. CBS.
^ abOuellette, Jennifer (September 1, 2015). "Bidding a Fond Farewell". Cocktail Party Physics. Scientific American Blog Network. Retrieved September 26, 2024.