The Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies gives science journalists the opportunity to deepen their knowledge of computer-based, data-driven science with a longer stay at the institute. For the seventh time, the program was announced internationally. Candidates from six continents applied. A committee of science journalists and scientists selected Jackson Ryan (Australia) as “HITS Journalist in Residence” for 2025.
Australian science journalist Jackson Ryan will be the next “Journalist in Residence” at the Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies (HITS). He will join the institute in April 2025.
Ryan is an award-winning science journalist. A trained scientist with a PhD in pharmaceutical and medical science, he has an eight-year track record as staff and freelance writer. Between 2019 and 2023 he was global science editor at the US tech publication CNET and held the role of science and tech reporter at the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) until February 2024. Since then, he has worked freelance, with pieces across the realms of science and technology published in The New York Times, The Guardian, The Saturday Paper, The Monthly, and Nature.
His chief focus has been on crafting longform, narrative nonfiction across a broad range of scientific disciplines — from astronomy to climate and Earth sciences, biology, big tech, health, and physics. His longform work about climate change in Antarctica was awarded Australia’s prestigious Eureka Prize for Science Journalism in 2022. Moreover, he is the current president of the Science Journalists Association of Australia.
During his stay at HITS, Ryan would like to use his time to develop a package of stories focusing on one key issue: Scientific integrity and trust in scientific expertise. “My plan is to research, develop and write a series of longform articles aimed at the public, academics and science journalists that explores the increasingly fraught relationship with the scientific process”, he says. He is particularly interested in the integrity of big datasets and learning from German scientists how they think about current issues of scientific misconduct.
In addition to this project, he is eager to meet German and other European science journalists to foster international ties between the journalistic communities. “I’d love to build on the work started by a former HITS Journalist in Residence, Carl Smith, in strengthening the global science journalism community,” he says. He encourages those interested in building these ties to get in touch with him.
To date, twelve journalists from Canada, the U.S., Australia, India, Spain and Germany have been awarded the HITS fellowship — which started in 2012 with the award-winning German science journalist Volker Stollorz, now chief editor of the German Science Media Center in Cologne (https://www.sciencemediacenter.de/en/), an organization run by journalists that provides journalists with what they need.
HITS is a private, non-profit basic research institute. It was founded by the Klaus Tschira Foundation in 2010. At HITS, currently around 130 scientists from more than 40 countries work in 12 research groups in areas where large amounts of data are produced and processed – from Molecular Biology to Astrophysics. One of the institute’s aims is to make the public more aware of the importance of computer-based, data-driven science, especially in natural sciences.
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Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies (HITS)
HITS, the Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies, was established in 2010 by physicist and SAP co-founder Klaus Tschira (1940-2015) and the Klaus Tschira Foundation as a private, non-profit research institute. HITS conducts basic research in the natural, mathematical, and computer sciences. Major research directions include complex simulations across scales, making sense of data, and enabling science via computational research. Application areas range from molecular biology to astrophysics. An essential characteristic of the Institute is interdisciplinarity, implemented in numerous cross-group and cross-disciplinary projects. The base funding of HITS is provided by the Klaus Tschira Foundation.
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