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Anjana Ahuja

Science Commentator

Anjana Ahuja is a contributing writer on science, offering weekly opinion on significant developments in global science, health and technology. She was previously a feature writer and columnist at The Times in London.

She is the co-author, with Professor Mark Van Vugt, of Selected: Why Some People Lead, Why Others Follow, and Why It Matters (2010), on the evolution of human leadership. With Sir Jeremy Farrar, she also co-authored the bestselling Spike: The Virus Vs The People (2021/updated paperback 2022), on the inside story of the Covid-19 pandemic. Spike was shortlisted for the 2022 Orwell Prize for Political Writing and is shortlisted for the 2022 Royal Society Science Book Prize.

Anjana has a PhD in space physics from Imperial College London, and studied journalism at City University, London.

Email Anjana Ahuja @anjahuja  on Twitter (link opens in a new browser window)
  • Wednesday, 19 June, 2024
    Flexible working
    Invested in the WFH argument? Home in on the evidence

    Empirically robust trials are particularly important in evaluating social and economic interventions

    Andy Carter illustration of a person working comfortably and productively from his home environment, while other in office workers around are tired and burnt out.
  • Wednesday, 12 June, 2024
    Disease control and prevention
    Women have a lot on their Petri dish

    A new WHO survey suggests that they are more exposed than men to superbugs

    Andy Carter illustration of a person standing on a stage the shape of coronavirus in the spotlight
  • Wednesday, 5 June, 2024
    Science
    A giant genome shows size doesn’t matter

    The new discovery in the south Pacific illustrates the mystery surrounding the code of life

    Andy Carter illustration of scientists as if they were new world explorers at sea, with 1 version showing the DNA pattern being created in the boats wake, and the other as the scientists sailing on waves doubling as DNA helices.
  • Wednesday, 22 May, 2024
    Environment
    Humans may turn out to be the most crucial ‘keystone’ species of them all

    Consensus about how to define the concept remains elusive among ecologists

    Andy Carter illustration of two conservationists looking into a habitat ‘orb’, with a large starfish clinging on to show the large impact it has. However, the conservationists are peeling back one of it’s legs and looking instead at the overall habitat as well.
  • Friday, 17 May, 2024
    Science
    The epidemic of bogus science

    There’s an arms race in academic publishing between AI, fraud detectors and authorship brokers

    A highlighter pen being used on a sheet of paper covered in text
  • Wednesday, 15 May, 2024
    Science
    Northern delights: more luminous treats may lie in store

    The question of how we classify and weather such geomagnetic storms needs revisiting

    Andy Carter illustration of a group of people amongst their cars looking up at the wildly bright aurora.
  • Wednesday, 8 May, 2024
    Science
    The next critical mineral source could be volcanic soup

    Geologists are exploring whether magmatic brine can be tapped for dissolved treasure such as lithium, copper and cobalt

    Andy Carter illustration of people inspecting a glowing layer of magmatic brine within a volcano that contains valuable rare earth metals.
  • Wednesday, 1 May, 2024
    Medical science
    How worried should we be about the return of bird flu?

    Now is not a time for paranoia but there is a case for extreme vigilance

    Andy Carter illustration of a bird flu virus trying to break out of a bird cage
  • Friday, 26 April, 2024
    Space exploration
    Rejoice! Voyager 1 is back from the dead

    The craft embodies a golden age of space exploration

    This artist’s concept of NASA’s Voyager spacecraft with its antennapointing to Earth
  • Wednesday, 24 April, 2024
    Climate change
    Beware the pragmatism of the nonchalant ‘hot earthers’

    Defending the environmental status quo in the name of ‘pragmatism’ is indefensible

    Andy Carter illustration of a man in a suit casually walking along while the world burns around him
  • Wednesday, 17 April, 2024
    Artificial intelligence
    Can AI really change our material world?

    Compounds produced by the technology challenge our idea of novelty

    Andy Carter illustration of a robot walking along throwing everything into it’s bag without analysing whether it’s novel or useful
  • Wednesday, 3 April, 2024
    Science
    The explosive evolutionary tactics of snakes

    A new study shows the twisting backstory of an animal touted as a new superfood

    Andy Carter illustration of a snake flying ahead, while the other slower lizards look on in awe
  • Wednesday, 27 March, 2024
    Science
    Trump’s curious effect on trust in science

    His presidential term jolted many people out of the zone of indifference

    Andy Carter illustration of a scientist looking through a microscope, with Donald Trump speaking at a lectern under its lens
  • Thursday, 14 March, 2024
    ReviewScience books
    The enduring mystery of how humans learned to speak

    In ‘The Language Puzzle’, archaeologist Steven Mithen explores how linguistic and evolutionary development go hand in hand, from our grunt-filled past to our garrulous present

    Symbols carved on a square of black stone
  • Tuesday, 12 March, 2024
    Disease control and prevention
    The UK could be a vaccine superpower, but it needs a booster

    We risk forgetting the lessons of the Covid pandemic

    Ewan White illustration of hands in black gloves holding a syringe to draw liquid from a vial coloured in the Union Jack
  • Wednesday, 6 March, 2024
    Chemicals
    The battle against forever chemicals should not become a forever war

    The coveted qualities which make these substances resistant to water and oil has also rendered them virtually indestructible

    Ann Kiernan illustration of pink lake  with dark chemicals on the water’s edge and a toxic sign stuck in the middle of it
  • Wednesday, 28 February, 2024
    Science
    UK scientists don’t need a corporate saviour as their boss

    Replacing a top researcher with a private sector manager would send entirely the wrong signal

    Andy Carter illustration of scientists studying a chalkboard which has the symbols cash multiplied by science drawn on it
  • Wednesday, 21 February, 2024
    Science
    There is magic in the discovery of a new type of magnetism

    Altermagnets could help make computing more energy efficient

    Andy Carter illustration of a scientist floating among electrons spinning/whooshing around her, with papers, files, computation/maths symbols floating in the mix
  • Friday, 9 February, 2024
    ReviewHistory books
    Smoke and Ashes review — Amitav Ghosh on the opium trade

    The Ibis trilogy author looks back at how Britain used the drug to pummel India, corrupt China and prop up its empire

    A poppy
  • Wednesday, 7 February, 2024
    OpenAI
    AI’s bioterrorism potential should not be ruled out

    Risk evaluation of the technology cannot be left to the industry alone

    Andy Carter illustration of a scientist showing a regulator a screen with an AI/bot mixing chemicals, but behind the scenes we see the full picture and the dangerous chemical it’s making.
  • Wednesday, 31 January, 2024
    Genomics
    The EU risks losing out on farming’s genomic reboot

    Scientists in Africa and elsewhere are seizing the opportunity to transform agriculture

    Andy Carter illustration of 2 branches of a plant, one with a defiant EU type, with his branch wilting and weak looking, and another with African scientists opening a hatch and working on the genes, with a branch full of life.
  • Tuesday, 23 January, 2024
    Science
    The case for a social sciences tsar is stronger than ever

    An exclusionary focus on shiny new technology has left the UK’s research and innovation strategy lopsided

    Andy Carter illustration of three scientific types - a man in a suit with a speech bubble, a woman in a lab coat looking at a microscope and another lab-coated person holding a glass flask containing an orange liquid. They are all under a spotlight.
  • Wednesday, 17 January, 2024
    Space exploration
    A new galactic superstructure could undo science’s theory of the universe

    The finding has provoked a mixed reaction among the cosmological cognoscenti

    Andy Carter illustration of scientists looking through a telescope, with the eye showing up in the end of the telescope with the big ring of galaxies
  • Wednesday, 10 January, 2024
    Science
    Could an AI ‘death calculator’ actually be a good thing?

    A new Danish algorithm exploits the fact that both language and life are sequences

  • Tuesday, 26 December, 2023
    Health
    Worrying about your festive BMI? You may not need to

    The measure is saddled with scientific and historical baggage — and may not be that useful anyway

    A person stands on weighing scales while another paints over the scales’ measurement indicator
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