Hannah Marion Critchlow (born 1980) is a British scientist, writer and broadcaster. Her academic research has focused on cellular and molecular neuroscience.[1][2][3][4] In 2014 the Science Council named her as one of the ten leading "communicator scientists" in the UK.[5] In 2019 Nature listed her as one of Cambridge Universities "Rising Stars in Biological Sciences".[6] In 2022 she was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from Brunel University for her work in neuroscience and communication.[7]
In parallel with her research career, Critchlow began to establish herself as an effective science communicator and public face of science. She took part in a Rising Stars programme run by the University of Cambridge's Public Engagement team in 2011[14] and, together with the cosmologist Andrew Pontzen, produced a series of Naked Shorts on their research for the award-winning podcast The Naked Scientists.[11][14] A series of talks developed by Critchlow to take to schools and public festivals led to her giving a talk on "brain myths" at the Hay Literary Festival in 2015 that attracted national and international media interest.[15][16][17] This led in turn to her being commissioned by Penguin Books to write an introductory book on Consciousness[18] and to presenting Tomorrow's World Live for the BBC[19] and Family Brain Games.[20] In 2017 Critchlow was appointed as a Science Outreach Fellow by Magdalene College, Cambridge[11][8][18] She was a judge for the 2018 Wellcome Book Prize.[21] In 2019 she was elected member of the prestigious European Dana Alliance of the Brain and named by Nature as one of Cambridge University's 'Rising Stars in Life Sciences' [6] in recognition for her achievements in science engagement. That same year her second book was published called The Science of Fate and made it onto the Sunday Times Bestseller list.[22]
Publications
Books
Critchlow, Hannah (25 August 2022). Joined up Thinking: The Power of Collective Intelligence to Change Our Lives. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN9781529398397.
Critchlow, Hannah (2 May 2019). The Science of Fate: Why Your Future is More Predictable Than You Think. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN978-1473659285.
Critchlow, HM; Maycox, PR; Skepper, JN; Krylova, O (August 2006). "Clozapine and haloperidol differentially regulate dendritic spine formation and synaptogenesis in rat hippocampal neurons". Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience. 32 (4): 356–365. doi:10.1016/j.mcn.2006.05.007. PMID16844384. S2CID33783762.
Critchlow, HM; Payne, A; Griffin, DK (August 2006). "Genes and proteins involved in the control of meiosis". Cytogenetic and Genome Research. 105 (1): 4–10. doi:10.1159/000078002. PMID15218251. S2CID46245478.